Platkin Joins Multistate Coalition in Opposing Trump Administration’s Proposed Rollback of Abortion Care for Veterans

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Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin today joined a coalition of 22 attorneys general in submitting a comment letter opposing the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) proposed federal rule that would eliminate access to abortion care for veterans and their families.

On August 4, 2025, the Trump Administration published a proposed rule that, if adopted, would formally undo the Biden Administration’s “Reproductive Health Services” Rule (the Rule), which currently allows veterans and their survivors and dependents to access abortion services at VA health care centers in situations where the patient’s life or health is threatened and in cases of self-reported rape or incest. The Rule, which was finalized in 2024, also permits veterans and their survivors and dependents to access abortion counseling at VA health centers.

After the Trump Administration indicated it was reviewing the Rule, a coalition of attorneys general — including the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General — met with VA officials and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) on April 8, 2025, to express why rolling back the Rule would cause harm to veterans and their families. This comment letter is being submitted in response to the VA’s invitation for public comment on its proposed rollback of the Rule.

“Our service members deserve better than to lose access to critical reproductive healthcare services because of President Trump’s extreme anti-choice political agenda,” said Attorney General Platkin. “This rule change endangers the lives of our veterans and their families. The Trump Administration should put aside partisan politics, and it should not recklessly overturn decades of policy that have protected women in the armed forces. We owe it to our service members to act in their best interests, and any rule that restricts their access to reproductive freedom fails to meet that obligation.”

On September 2, 2022, in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade, the Biden Administration’s VA announced the interim version of the Rule. On October 11, 2022, Attorney General Platkin filed a comment letter supporting the VA’s efforts to increase reproductive freedom. After receiving public comment, the VA finalized the Rule on March 4, 2024. Since the Dobbs decision, at least 19 states have banned or restricted abortion care, while others are still proposing new restrictions.

In the letter, the attorneys general write that:

  • The proposed rule presents an unclear standard as to when, if at all, VA physicians can provide abortion care. Specifically, the proposed rule’s preamble insists that it will allow VA physicians to provide lifesaving care — in circumstances “when a physician certifies that the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term” — while the proposed regulatory text bans abortion care for veterans entirely. Generally, where there is a discrepancy between the preamble and the regulatory text, the regulatory text controls. In addition, to the extent that the VA carves out an exception for the lives of pregnant survivors and dependents, it fails to set out a process by which individuals may take advantage of the exception.
  • The proposed rule is extreme in its formulation and is out of step with existing abortion exceptions on the state and federal level. Although exceptions themselves are problematic and often difficult to administer, the VA’s proposed changes would mark a substantial and inhumane departure from decades of policy protecting the health and lives of pregnant patients and the autonomy of pregnant patients who have experienced rape and incest.
  • The proposed rule is inadequately justified. It falsely claims that the VA does not have legal authority to provide abortion care, obfuscates federal abortion policy in falsely claiming that Congress intended a VA abortion ban, and relies on political considerations instead of medical ones.

Joining Attorney General Platkin in sending the comment letter are the attorneys general of California, Massachusetts, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and the District of Columbia.

A copy of the comment letter can be found here.

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