As post-Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization retaliation dressed as COVID-19 relief, the Biden Food and Drug Administration removed the very last of any common-sense safety regulations on the abortion drug, mifepristone, making the dangerous drug available on demand to the general public via mail without doctor oversight. The abortion drug is now responsible for more than two-thirds of abortions, killing around 700,000 unborn humans in the U.S. annually and injuring 1 in 10 women who take the drug. Correcting Biden’s error is not only the right thing to do, but it would be an easy way to energize the pro-life electorate ahead of the midterm elections.A 2026 Cygnal poll is a troublesome canary in the coal mine for November’s midterm elections, finding that 84% of self-described “Trump Republicans” and 85% of “MAHA Republicans” believe the Food and Drug Administration should scrap the Biden-era mail-order abortion scheme and require in-person dispensing requirements for abortion drugs. Seventy-two percent disapprove of the FDA’s approval of another generic mifepristone last year.

The survey’s most damning results for the midterm elections revealed that 32% of the GOP base will be less enthusiastic about voting in November if the GOP abandons pro-life priorities. Cygnal’s senior pollster wrote in his analysis: “This is not a marginal constituency, it is the GOP primary core.” These pro-life voters will impact the coming elections — for better or for worse.A look back at 2016 and 2024 should serve as evidence for the electoral importance of the pro-life contingency. In 2016, 77% of all evangelical Christians voted for President Donald Trump, constituting the GOP’s single largest voting bloc. Catholics followed at 64%. In 2024, 80% of evangelicals voted for the GOP, along with 60% of Catholics. Evangelical and Catholic voters carried the GOP to victory in 2016 and 2024, and they are also the strongest, most pro-life voting blocs.