Abortion rights
Pro-abortion activists demonstrate in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC. as the court hears a challenge to California law requiring anti-abortion pregnancy clinics to distribute information on family planning services, March 20, 2018. NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

The Trump administration has proposed a new rule that would impose restrictions on abortion in the United States. The proposal, submitted by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to the Office of Management and Budget for review Friday, sought to restrict federally funded health clinics from offering or referring patients for abortions.

If made into a rule, it would amend the Title X Family planning program — the federal grant scheme aimed at subsidizing birth control and reproductive health care in the U.S. Under the new plan, hospitals, community health centers and clinics would be barred from receiving Title X funding if they perform abortions or refer women to abortion providers.

Under Title X - enacted by former President Richard Nixon in 1970 to offer assistance to patients from low-income families and uninsured people — the government will allot $260m a year for family planning services such as contraception and health checks, BBC reported.

Though Title X funding cannot be used to perform abortions, anti-abortion-rights campaigners have long been complaining against organizations like Planned Parenthood — the largest abortion provider in the nation- receiving Title X funds. The new move has made the activists happy, who lauded President Donald Trump for "delivering on a key promise.”

Speaking about the proposal, a Trump administration official told The Weekly Standard, “The proposal would require a bright line of physical as well as financial separation between Title X programs and any program (or facility) where abortion is performed, supported, or referred for as a method of family planning.”

Planned Parenthood dubbed the proposal as "dangerous" and "outrageous" and said it would "have devastating consequences.”

While the White House claimed the plan would "improve women's health," pro-choice advocates voiced their opposition to the move. They said it could severely affect the most marginalized women in the U.S.

Several senators and House members, in two separate letters sent letters to the HHS on May 14, criticized the government attempts to limit health care clinics from accessing Title X funding.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who was one of the signatories, said, "This attack on Title X is another part of a broader assault by Republicans on the health, safety, and economic independence of women and their families."

Lili Gomez of WestFund, a group that offers financial assistance to help people undergo abortions in New Mexico, said,"Reproductive justice isn’t just abortion. It’s all kinds of forms of health care that affect a person’s reproductive and bodily autonomy to do reproductive care for themselves whether it be birth control or yearly pap smears or things like that."

This is not the first time the Trump administration has tried to attack abortion rights. Earlier this year, the president scrapped a rule, established under the Obama administration, that restricted states from excluding organizations like Planned Parenthood form the Medicaid program. Prior to that, in January 2017, Trump restored the Mexico City Policy or the “global gag rule” — enacted by former President Ronald Reagan in 1984 and rescinded by President Barack Obama in 2009. It will prevent international organizations that provide abortion services from receiving funding from the U.S. government.