Former President Donald Trump declared he was "the father of IVF" during a Fox News town hall that aired Wednesday while also saying he just recently discovered what the decades-old procedure actually is.
When he was told he was getting a question about in vitro fertilization, Trump said: "Oh, I want to talk about IVF. I’m the father of IVF, so I want to hear this question."
His questioner identified herself as a mother of three who has friends who are "very concerned that the abortion bans" sparked by the 2022 overturning of Roe v. Wade "will affect their ability to access IVF and other fertility treatments." She asked what Trump would say to those women.
His answer included a number of mischaracterizations and inaccuracies — and a comment on the appearance of Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala.
"So I got a call from Katie Britt, a young, just a fantastically attractive person from Alabama. She’s a senator, and she called me up like 'emergency, emergency' because an Alabama judge had ruled that the IVF clinics were illegal and they have to be closed down. A judge ruled, and she said, friends of mine came up to me and they were, oh, they were so angry. I didn’t even know they were going, you know, she, they were, it’s fertilization. I didn’t know they were even involved in — nobody talks about, they don’t talk about it," Trump's answer began.
The court case he was referring to was the conservative Alabama Supreme Court’s decision that frozen embryos created through IVF are considered children under state law, meaning people theoretically could be sued for destroying embryos.
The court did not say IVF clinics were illegal or needed to be shut down, but some clinics in the statepaused treatments, fearing they could face legal ramifications.
The IVF process, which dates to 1978, involves combining sperm and eggs in a lab to create embryos, then implanting one or more of the embryos in a person’s uterus. Extra embryos are often frozen and stored, but they are also frequently discarded if they have genetic abnormalities or if patients do not need to use them.
Trump said he asked Britt for more information.
"And I said, explain IVF, very IVF, very quickly. And within about two minutes, I understood it," Trump said, adding that he told Britt, "We're totally in favor of IVF."
He then portrayed himself as having leaped into action after the call.
"I came out with a statement within an hour, a really powerful statement with some experts, really powerful. And we went totally in favor, the Republican Party, the whole party. Alabama Legislature a day later overturned, meaning approved it. Overturned," he said.
Trump issued the statement on his social media platform, Truth Social, a week after the court ruling and a day after a Republican state senator and state House Democrats had introduced a bill to protect IVF.
Trump's statement said that "I strongly support the availability of IVF for couples who are trying to have a precious baby” and that he was "calling on the Alabama Legislature to act quickly to find an immediate solution to preserve the availability of IVF in Alabama.”
The Legislature passed its bill to ensure some protections, and Republican Gov. Kay Ivey signed it into law on March 6 — less than three weeks after the court decision.
Democrats have said the law would not have been necessary at all if Trump's appointees on the U.S. Supreme Court had not taken away abortion protections in 2022, but Trump maintained at the town hall that “we really are the party for IVF."
"We want fertilization, and it’s all the way. And the Democrats tried to attack on it, and we’re out there on IVF, even more than them, so we’re totally in favor of it," he said.
Republican support for IVF is not universal; some religious conservatives oppose it.
“Hundreds of thousands of embryos — each of them as fully human as you or me — are created and then destroyed or frozen in IVF procedures,” Pro-Life Action League President Ann Scheidler told Politico last month, after Trump declared that he was a "leader" on the issue during his debate with Vice President Kamala Harris.
Trump, who has been trying to bolster support from moderate women, was asked by NBC News in August what he would do in terms of IVF if he was elected in November and surprised many in his campaign and party by saying, “We are going to be, under the Trump administration, we are going to be paying for that treatment.”
“We’re going to be mandating that the insurance company pay,” he added.
Some fiscal conservatives, including Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., oppose the proposal, which Trump has yet to release in any detailed form.
“I’m all for people making an individual decision on IVF. But the government has no money. We’re $2 trillion in the hole, so I’m not for asking the taxpayer to pay for it,” Paul, who has not endorsed Trump this year, said last month. “People get emotional about an issue, so they decide to completely pander and go way over a position they never really supported because they’re afraid people accuse them.”
On Wednesday, Trump's campaign tried to walk back part of his remarks at the town hall — that he is the "father of IVF."
“It was a joke President Trump made in jest when he was enthusiastically answering a question about IVF as he strongly supports widespread access to fertility treatments for women and families,” spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
Harris told reporters Wednesday that Trump's "father of IVF" claim was "quite bizarre."
"What he should take responsibility for is that couples who are praying and hoping and working towards growing a family have been so disappointed and harmed by the fact that IVF treatments have now been put at risk," she said.