Pregnancy.Gov Act
Sponsored By: Representative Rep. Harshbarger, Diana [R-TN-1]
Introduced
Summary
A centralized federal pregnancy resource website would give pregnant and postpartum people one place to find local services and tailored referrals. The bill would also bar listing or funding for specified "prohibited entities" tied to abortion and set quality criteria for resources.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.
Grants to states to map pregnancy resources
The bill would let HHS give grants to states to build or support systems that gather pregnancy and postpartum resources. States would apply with an outreach plan and a resource list, and may use public or private groups at state, regional, or community levels. Recommended resources would need at least 3 straight years of service and may not be prohibited entities. Funding would use existing HHS accounts, with up to $50 million available for fiscal years 2026–2030. Congress could add more money later.
Website would exclude abortion providers
The website and its grants would not list or fund any "prohibited entity." Prohibited entities include those that perform, induce, refer for, or counsel in favor of abortions, or fund such groups. The bill would define "abortion" and list exceptions, including care after viability to produce a live birth, removing a dead unborn child, and treating an ectopic pregnancy. It would define what types of resources can be listed, such as mentorship, health care, financial and material support, mental health and recovery, prenatal diagnostics, adoption and child care, alternatives to abortion, abortion risks, and child development information.
Pregnancy.gov local help for families
This bill would require HHS to launch pregnancy.gov within one year. You would answer a ZIP code questionnaire to see nearby help for pregnancy and postpartum needs. You could filter by online or 1, 5, 10, 50, or 100 miles. You could give feedback and agree to get follow-up help by phone or email. The Office of the Secretary would run the site and could not delegate it below that level. The site would offer access in languages other than English.
Report and privacy rules for website
HHS would have to send Congress a report within 180 days after the site launches. It would include traffic, user feedback, gaps in services, and ideas to improve access. It would also certify that no prohibited entities are listed or funded. The report would not include personal identifying information about users.
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Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Rep. Harshbarger, Diana [R-TN-1]
TN • R
Cosponsors
Babin
TX • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
Crenshaw
TX • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
Rep. McCormick, Richard [R-GA-7]
GA • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
Biggs (SC)
SC • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
Fitzgerald
WI • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
Bilirakis
FL • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
Rose
TN • R
Sponsored 5/8/2025
LaMalfa
CA • R
Sponsored 5/9/2025
Fischbach
MN • R
Sponsored 5/13/2025
Norman
SC • R
Sponsored 5/13/2025
McGuire
VA • R
Sponsored 6/3/2025
Tenney
NY • R
Sponsored 2/17/2026
Rep. Harrigan, Pat [R-NC-10]
NC • R
Sponsored 4/16/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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