Budget Cuts, IVF Access and the Feminist Resistance: Dispatches From Week 1 of Women’s History Month in Trump’s America

President Donald Trump and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum
President Donald Trump speaks during an address to a joint session of Congress ion March 4, 2025; Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum attends a press conference after a call with Trump on March 6, 2025, after Trump announced a pause on U.S. tariffs on Mexico. (Win McNamee and Daniel Cardenas / Getty Images)

This story was originally published on The Contrarian.

Jen Rubin’s recent column called out the Dickensian nature of President Donald Trump’s agenda, the “abject immorality that is part and parcel of an ideology based on vengeful victimhood, conspiracy-mongering, and repudiation of science.”

Beyond the sheer cruelty, Trump’s antagonism toward government—and the attempts to swiftly dismantle federal agencies’ productivity and purpose—is a simultaneous affront to and attack on women and LGBTQ communities. Make no mistake: That is by design. As Professor Tressie McMillan Cottom underscores: “By giving people a scapegoat, giving men a scapegoat … it says not only are women the enemy, are people of color and minorities the enemy, but the government is protecting them. So not only do we need to push these people out, but we need to delegitimize and gut the government that made them possible so it doesn’t happen again.”

In the weeks and months to come, as we collectively continue to litigate and report and write and resist, we must not lose sight of this reality—because countering attacks on gender is foundational to the work of protecting and preserving democracy.

As this week’s headlines highlight Trump’s withdrawal of aid to Ukraine and trade wars with China, Canada and Mexico—and the lowlights of his remarks to a joint session of Congress (as per Jen Rubin, “the smallest, lowest speech in modern presidential history”)—here are other stories that also warrant attention:

Spending

House Republicans passed a budget resolution mirroring Trump’s vision of a “big, beautiful bill,” one that extends tax breaks to broligarchs and slashes federal spending. Notably, it includes more than $880 billion in cuts to Medicaid—for which women make up the majority of the adults who rely on it for primary and preventive care.

Democratic Women’s Caucus Chair Teresa Leger Fernández stated bluntly: “Women cannot afford the Republican budget.”

Public Health

As part of the administration’s push to obliterate federal medical research information, Talking Points Memo recently discovered and reported that among the casualties of Trump’s DEI executive order is key data from the Centers for Disease Control’s Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System. Charged with improving outcomes for babies and mothers, this research program has catalogued and analyzed infant and maternal health data since 1988.

Education

Schools run by the U.S. Department of Defense, abroad and at home, began to censor curriculum and activities last month, including curtailing Black History Month celebrations and taking down signage—the likes of which dared to state, “All Are Welcome.”

Now, they take aim at student organizations: Last week, schools for children of U.S. military members based in England and Germany reportedly paused STEM programming for girls and Pride clubs for all.

IVF

Trump’s recent executive order on IVF is, at best, useless, and at worst, a convention of red flags (as I explain here).

Meanwhile, the story of 24-year-old Ryleigh Cooper of Michigan went viral. Cooper is a (former) U.S. Forest Service employee who voted for Trump based on his campaign promise to make IVF affordable and instead found herself quickly out of a job, due to the DOGE purge. Now that she is without either a paycheck or health insurance, she told CNN she regrets casting her ballot for Trump.

Anti-Trans Discrimination

Maine Gov. Janet Mills stood in bold opposition to the executive order banning trans athletes from women’s sports. She stands apart as one of the few political leaders to personally counter Trump. When he threatened denial of federal funding to her state during a White House event, she responded precisely as she should have: “See you in court.” Since then, the administration has targeted Maine with multiple investigations: into the Maine Department of Education under Title IX; a compliance review of the University of Maine by the U.S. Department of Agriculture; and with a letter issued by Attorney General Pam Bondi threatening officials in Maine (and California and Minnesota) with lawsuits.

Senate Democrats banded together to block an administration-endorsed bill that would prohibit federally funded schools from allowing transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports.

In Iowa, Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a bill that removes gender identity from the state’s civil rights law, which had been amended in 2007 to include sexual orientation and gender identity. It is the first state to rescind the civil rights of a previously protected class.

Resources to Bookmark

I am regularly scouring for comprehensive resources to uplift. On my go-to list is the Center for Reproductive Rights’ Repro Red Flags: Agency Watch, which shares research on federal appointees, their antiabortion backgrounds, and the key powers of the agencies they will oversee; it also provides opportunities for taking action to oppose those who endanger reproductive rights and health. This week’s flag features what to watch for at the March 6 confirmation hearing for Dr. Martin Makary as U.S. Food and Drug Administration commissioner.

Another good summary of the first six weeks (has it really been less than 50 days?) is The 19th’s comprehensive One Month Status on Trump Executive Orders.

When Women Resist

I’ve added to this column a new update: “When Women Resist”—a companion to the Democracy Movement roundup:

I was thrilled to see Vermont’s Mad River Valley in the news this past weekend. Sugarbush was my second home as a kid. I still live by Mad River Glen’s motto and ethos: “Ski It If You Can.” Turns out JD Vance and family cannot ski it—they were iced out of vacation after protestors lined the streets and slopes.

Weiss-Wolf’s ski pass from 1978.

But the real MVP is local snow reporter Lucy Welch, whose morning message to skiers blasted the slashing of U.S. Forest Service jobs and noted the resort is on National Forest land: “I hope everyone coming to the mountain … is using their voice and standing up for what they know our community is and should be standing for. Our special guest, in my humble opinion, does not reflect the values and the magic of this place.”

Thank you, Lucy Welch. May we all have the courage to use our voice so boldly, whenever the opportunity arises.

About

Jennifer Weiss-Wolf is the executive director of Ms. partnerships and strategy. A lawyer, fierce advocate and frequent writer on issues of gender, feminism and politics in America, Weiss-Wolf has been dubbed the “architect of the U.S. campaign to squash the tampon tax” by Newsweek. She is the author of Periods Gone Public: Taking a Stand for Menstrual Equity, which was lauded by Gloria Steinem as “the beginning of liberation for us all,” and is a contributor to Period: Twelve Voices Tell the Bloody Truth. She is also the executive director of the Birnbaum Women’s Leadership Center at NYU Law. Find her on Twitter: @jweisswolf.