December 26, 2024
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Before the South Carolina GOP primary, Haley appears to have backed an IVF verdict from an Alabama court.

Nikki Haley, a Republican running for president, made an effort to explain why she seemed to agree with an Alabama Supreme Court decision last week over in vitro fertilization, or IVF. Midway through February, the California Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are children. The decision has left proponents of in vitro fertilization reeling and has all but stopped the practice in that state. She stated, “I didn’t say that I agreed with the Nikki Haleyruling,” on King Charles with CNN. “This case was based on and should be based on the rights of those parents for their embryos and to make sure that they have the responsibility with the doctors on how they should be handled, not more than that,” she said.

“A life is what you mean when you talk about an embryo to me. Therefore, when people discuss it, I can understand where they’re coming from,” she said to NBC. Former President Donald Trump, who was Haley’s rival, urged Alabama lawmakers on Friday to overturn the ruling made by the state Supreme Court. The day before he was to take against Haley in her home state primary, he made an appeal in a post on Truth Social. “We want to make it easier for mothers and fathers to have babies, not harder!” In the post, Trump wrote.

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