President Joe Biden cleared the path for international abortion funding just days after he entered office in 2021. (Susan Walsh/AP)
Biden cleared the path for U.S. funding to flow toward pro-abortion groups across the globe just days after entering office. He signed an executive order rescinding the Reagan-era "Mexico City Rule" on Jan. 28, 2021.
The rule, first rescinded by President Barack Obama and then reinstated during Trump's first term, prevented foreign aid from going to nongovernmental organizations that promote abortion or provide abortion services.
"These excessive conditions on foreign and development assistance undermine the United States’ efforts to advance gender equality globally by restricting our ability to support women’s health," Biden said at the time.
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Biden's rule change cleared USAID to send millions in funding to aggressive abortion organizations like Marie Stopes International (MSI). MSI said it relied on USAID for 17% of its total donor income under the Obama administration, adding that the lack of U.S. support created an $80-million "funding gap" over the final three years of Trump's term.
The group said the countries most heavily impacted by the lack of funding were Madagascar, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
Presidents Trump and Biden reversed one another's policies on funding abortions abroad. (Getty Images)
Biden's administration was accused in December of pressuring the government of Sierra Leone to adopt more permissive abortion policies in exchange for foreign assistance.
A report from the Daily Signal stated that The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government-run funding allocator, was threatening to withhold hundreds of millions in foreign assistance funding if the nation didn't relax its policies, a former senior U.S. government official told the outlet.
The MCC CEO Alice Albright signed an agreement with Sierra Leone's finance minister, Sheku Bangura, in late September. The agreement called for the country to receive $480 million in foreign assistance so long as it met the MCC's "rigorous standards for good governance, fighting corruption and respecting democratic rights."
The organization denied any effort to influence Sierra Leone's abortion policies in a statement to Fox News Digital in December.
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"The Millennium Challenge Corporation is unaware of any Sierra Leonean abortion legislation and has never made any requests to the Government of Sierra Leone regarding abortion policies. Any such legislation would be an internal matter for Sierra Leone with no U.S. government developments fund made contingent on its passage," the organization said in a statement.
Footage circulating on social media showed raucous pro-life protesters demonstrating inside Sierra Leone's parliament at the time as lawmakers debated legislation detailing more permissive abortion rules.
Fox News' Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report.
Anders Hagstrom is a reporter with Fox News Digital covering national politics and major breaking news events. Send tips to Anders.Hagstrom@Fox.com, or on Twitter: @Hagstrom_Anders.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/flashback-biden-admin-repeatedly-used-usaid-push-abortion-africa