let s talk about it more with president and ceo of americans united for life and the president of susan b anthony. we invited someone to be from planned parenthood they didn t join us but we have a taped knew. i want to start with the idea of a gag rule. the pro-choice folks say that s what this amounts to. you can counsel people on abortions but you can t refer them? that s correct. there is no gag rule. it s trying to deflect from the reality of what this is. it s an attempt to divide
veterans in a decade. the proposal would remove a 15-year time limit on benefits which would make more money available. it s an effort to fill coverage gaps in the gi bill. awesome. ainsley? ainsley: thank you, brian. the parents of 11-month-old charlie gard storming out of a british courtroom where they were making a final pitch. a final plea to keep their young son alive. the u.k. s high court set to rule on whether the terminally ill infant how see here can come to the united states for experimental treatment or be pulled off of life support. catherine glen foster is the president and ceo of americans united for life and she is an attorney smawrgt charlie gard s family. catherine, you were there i know in the courtroom yesterday during that emotional hearing. tell us what the latest is. well, there is going to be another hearing today. so this case is not settled. but, yesterday s hearing was explosive. we saw a doctor testify that
we re not saying one supreme court justice would be enough. we have four years with a president who has promised to consider this issue when choosing his supreme court justices. and the pro-life movement is sending a message that we are paying attention, we are here, and we are expecting president trump to keep that promise. so i ll ask you this question now. so you re at this big rally. what is the next step? you re going to hold trump s feet to the fire. so is there a plan? well, here at americans united for life, we have been working with state legislators for many decades on making sure that at the state level, we are promoting good legislation that protects both mothers and their unborn infants from the abortion industry. and so we re going to continue to push our legislation to help legislators to protect the mothers and the children in their states. so that whenever the supreme court is ready to hear this issue again, they have a solid
for americans united for life, welcome. thank you for having me today. thanks for being here. i see you re at the march. so is this the moment? because the crowd appears very energized right now. it s a very hopeful crowd. this is our moment for many of us that have been in the pro-life movement, as a new generation of pro-life activists. so i m just saying that, do you think that a victory is very close? or i mean, are you hopeful it s close? i think we have a unique moment in history right now where we have the ability to maybe take the supreme court back to a constitutional court where this isn t a political issue but the legal issue it was always intended to be. president trump says he has a supreme court nominee in mind, actually there are three he has in his mind, all are george bush nominees, all are conservative.
out a law requiring doctors at clinics to have hospital administering privileges. and here in florida a federal judge is being asked to block additional parts of this state s contentious abortion law over constitutional rights issues. the american civil liberties union, the aclu of florida, filed a lawsuit late yesterdays on behalf of several ministers, rabbis and organizations that provide abortion counseling services to women. tonight, we bring you an exclusive first look at shocking information about just how dangerous some abortion clinics are in this country. chief legal correspondent shannon bream tells us the information comes as president-elect donald trump considers his policy on abortion funding. reporter: a brand new report by the pro-life legal advocacy group, americans united for life, tracks hundreds of abortion clinics in 32 states, compiling more than 1,400 health and safety violations since 2008. calling it the evidence the