Budapest: The former US Vice President Mike Pence said Thursday that he hoped the new majority of conservatives at the Supreme Court created during the administration of President Donald Trump would immediately reverse abortion rights in the United States.
Pence speaks in forums aimed at demographics and family values in Budapest where conservative leaders from Europe have expressed anxiety about birth shooters in the Western world and discussing ways to reverse trends.
The Budapest Demographic Summit, which was first held in 2015 and took place every two years, has become a platform for leaders to condemn the migration and urge the family to have more children.
“We see a crisis that brings us here today, a crisis that attacks in the heart of the civilization itself.
The erosion of the nuclear family marked by the decline in the level of marriage, increasing divorce, extensive abortion and slapping the rate of birth,” Pence said.
He praised the fact that the abortion rate fell under the Prime Minister of Hungary Hungarian Conservative Viktor Orban, and voiced hope that everything would change in the United States too.
He remembered that the administration in which he served as vice president appointed 300 conservative judges to the federal court, including the new three judges to the Supreme Court.
“We may have a new start in the causes of life in America,” Pence said.
“It is our hope and our prayers that in the coming days, the new majority of conservatives in the Supreme Court of the United States will take action to recover the sanctity of life in the center of American law.” This is an important time for abortion rights in the United States.
The legislature of the Republican State of Republicans has imposed an increasingly fierce law and the majority of the Supreme Court of Supreme Court recently enables Texas law that prohibits most of the abortion to get into force.
The court is due next to consider the prohibition of Mississippi in most abortions after 15 weeks.
Anti-abortion activist hopes that the court will use the case to reverse the 1973 case, Roe V.
Wade, a landmark decision to ensure the constitutional right of women over abortion.