Red States Advance Alliance Defending Freedom Model Laws Shielding Crisis Pregnancy Centers
The article reports that Wyoming lawmakers passed a state version of the Alliance Defending Freedom–drafted Center Autonomy and Rights of Expression (CARE) Act on March 4, 2026, with similar model bills moving through Kansas and Oklahoma and a related statute already on the books in Montana since 2025. These measures bar state and local governments from requiring crisis pregnancy centers to perform or refer for abortions or provide information about abortion or contraception, and they create a right for those centers to sue if they believe a government has violated those protections. Supporters, including Wyoming’s LifeChoice Pregnancy Care Center director Valerie Berry, frame the bills as defending freedom of speech, association and conscience for largely religiously affiliated organizations they say have faced "unprecedented attacks" since Roe v. Wade was overturned. Critics such as UC‑Davis law professor Mary Ziegler argue the laws would insulate centers from medical standards and blur the line between health care and advocacy, especially given long‑running complaints that many centers present themselves as medical clinics without meeting normal regulatory requirements. The story also notes that a parallel federal proposal, the Let Pregnancy Centers Serve Act, was introduced in Congress but has stalled in the House Energy and Commerce Committee, highlighting how Republicans are using these protections as part of a broader post‑Dobbs messaging and policy strategy going into the midterms.
📌 Key Facts
- Wyoming passed a version of the CARE Act, model legislation written by Alliance Defending Freedom, on March 4, 2026.
- Montana enacted a similar law in 2025, and related CARE Act bills are advancing this year in Kansas and Oklahoma.
- The laws prohibit state and local governments from requiring crisis pregnancy centers to perform or refer for abortions or to provide information on abortion or contraception, and they allow centers to sue governments that violate those provisions.
- Supporters like Valerie Berry of LifeChoice Pregnancy Care Center in Cheyenne describe the measures as protecting free speech and conscience rights amid what they call growing government targeting of pregnancy centers.
- Opponents, including legal scholar Mary Ziegler, warn that these protections would exempt crisis pregnancy centers from medical standards and further blur the line between advocacy and health care.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2022, Black patients accounted for 42.9% of abortions in the US, White patients for 27.6%, Hispanic patients for 20.6%, and other groups for the remainder, while Black individuals represent about 13.6% of the US population, Hispanics 18.9%, and Whites 58.9%.
U.S. abortion statistics | Hey Jane — Hey Jane
As of 2024, there were more than 2,600 anti-abortion pregnancy centers operating in the US, compared to about 765 abortion clinics.
Rise of crisis pregnancy centers highlights shift in anti-abortion movement — PBS NewsHour
As of December 2025, 19 states had authorized some form of alternatives to abortion funding for life-affirming pregnancy help organizations, including crisis pregnancy centers, with states like Louisiana redirecting $12.3 million in TANF funds to such centers since 2017.
Fact Sheet: State Alternatives to Abortion Funding — Lozier Institute
Between 12% and 20% of women aged 18-44 with a history of pregnancy or testing for pregnancy in Arizona, Wisconsin, Iowa, and New Jersey reported ever visiting a crisis pregnancy center, with no significant correlation to age, race/ethnicity, or socioeconomic status.
Prevalence of crisis pregnancy center attendance among women in four US states — PLOS ONE
Unintended pregnancy rates in the US from 2015-2019 were 70 per 1,000 women aged 15-49 for Black women, 52 for Hispanic women, and 32 for White women, with socioeconomic factors like income and education contributing to these differences.
Pregnancy Trends in the United States — Guttmacher Institute
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