United Kingdom
Related: About this forumAlliance Defending Freedom Succeeded in Overturning Roe. Now It's Turning to the United Kingdom.
(and the PATRIARCHAL, MISOGYNIST, CHRISTOFASCIST, THEOCRATIC WAR ON WOMEN continues apace!!!)
Alliance Defending Freedom Succeeded in Overturning Roe. Now Its Turning to the United Kingdom.
PUBLISHED 11/14/2025 by Cat Ross
The conservative Christian legal group that helped dismantle abortion rights in the United States is now exporting its playbook overseas, starting with the United Kingdom.

Alliance Defending Freedom lawyer John Bursch (R) arrives outside the U.S. Supreme Court on on April 2, 2025, the day of oral arguments in the case of Medina v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, an attempt by South Carolina to exclude Planned Parenthood from its Medicaid program because it provides abortions. (Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images)
If you follow the fight over abortion access in the U.S., youve likely heard of the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF). The powerful nonprofit was instrumental in Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization, the Supreme Court case that overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. ADF drafted model legislation used to defend Mississippis 15-week ban and has long championed policies targeting LGBTQ+ rights, contraception access and same-sex marriage. Now, ADF is setting its sights across the Atlantic. The organizationwhich boasts operations in 112 countrieshas been quietly expanding its influence in Britain through its new alliance with the right-wing Reform Party, led by populist figure Nigel Farage.
ADFs Growing Footprint in the U.K.
Through ADFs global counterpart, ADF International, the group has offered legal aid to antiabortion protesters charged with violating buffer zone lawslaws that protect patients and providers from harassment outside reproductive health clinics.The organization has also arranged meetings between Reform and the Trump administration to discuss abortion and online safety laws. (ADF denies that its representatives have met with Farage directly to discuss abortion.) The Reform-ADF partnership is following a familiar playbook: reframing reproductive rights as a free-speech issue. ADF has backed efforts to challenge the Public Order Act of 2023, which established safe access zones around abortion clinics150-meter perimeters designed to prevent harassment and obstruction. Despite broad public support for these zones (77 percent of Britons favor them), Farage and his allies have called the policy a sinister crackdown on expression. On Sept. 3, Farage appeared before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Trump ally Rep. Jim Jordan, to testify against the Online Safety Act, which protects children in the U.K. from viewing age-inappropriate content such as acts of violence or pornography. (The law took effect in the U.K. in October 2023, and has been implemented in phases.) Farage also argued the law harms free expression.
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Right-Wing Populism and the Antiabortion Playbook
The alliance between ADF and Reform isnt just about British politicsits part of a global populist strategy that uses abortion to rally conservative voters and reshape public values. Britains Reform Party is not the first populist movement to use reproductive rights as a political wedge. In Poland, the right-wing Law and Justice Party pushed the nations constitutional court to outlaw nearly all abortions in 2020, sparking mass protests. In the United States, a decades-long coalition of conservative Catholics and evangelical Christiansfueled by ADFs legal and financial musclesucceeded in overturning Roe v. Wade and continues to target abortion pills, contraception and LGBTQ+ protections. The same forces are now finding traction in Britain. While the U.K. is far less religious than the U.S., populist narratives can travel easilyespecially when they tap into voter frustration or fear. Reforms messaging on immigration and family values has already proven potent, and aligning with ADF gives that rhetoric an organized legal and moral framework.
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Why It Matters
The U.K. has long viewed abortion as a pragmatic healthcare issue, not a political flashpoint. But that relative calm makes it vulnerable: When reproductive rights arent explicitly protected in law, theyre easier to chip away through courts and culture.The ADFs expansion into Britain should serve as a warning. Its success in the United States shows how quickly a well-funded network can reshape laws and normalize extremism under the banner of free speech and religious liberty. Abortion rights in Britain may appear secure, but history proves otherwise: Once rights are treated as privileges, they can vanish. To protect reproductive freedom, advocates must recognize this cross-Atlantic strategy for what it is: a deliberate, coordinated campaign to roll back progress wherever it exists.
https://msmagazine.com/2025/11/14/alliance-defending-freedom-abortion-reform-uk-usa-trump-farage-united-kingdom/
Joinfortmill
(19,535 posts)Emrys
(8,755 posts)Buffer zones around clinics offering abortion services in Scotland will come into force on 24 September.
The new law will prevent any protests or vigils from taking place within 200m (656ft) of 30 clinics around the country.
Opponents had claimed the legislation would infringe on freedom of religion, but it was passed overwhelmingly by MSPs in June.
...
Within the buffer zones, it will be a criminal offence to behave in ways that could influence the decisions of women and staff to access services.
Stopping women and staff from entering the clinics or otherwise causing alarm, harassment or distress will also be an offence.
Anyone who breaks the new Safe Access Zone laws could be fined up to £10,000 or an unlimited amount in more serious cases.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy0r75n72qzo
Reform will have problems gaining leverage in Scotland even without trying to push yet more fringe views on the populace. These issues were thoroughly aired in Scotland a couple of years ago as the legislation passed through the Scottish Parliament, so there's unlikely to be much appetite for rehashing the arguments any time soon, and their scope as wedge issues has already been more or less wrung dry. The activities of Alliance Defending Freedom and the allied group CARE for Scotland during that period obviously didn't sway the outcome - in fact, may have been counterproductive. If they try more of the same during next year's Scottish Parliament elections, they may hamper Reform's chances of making any inroads despite defections from the Tories (one MSP resigned from the Scottish Conservatives and joined Reform not so long ago - she'll have problems holding on to her seat anyway).
Indeed, pressures on abortion law in Scotland are currently coming from the opposite side of the spectrum (this story was published today):
Scotland's abortion laws are "not fit for purpose" according to an expert group, which has called for legal recognition for a woman's right to choose.
Currently, an abortion is only legal before 24 weeks when two doctors agree that certain grounds have been met - such as a risk to the mother's physical or mental health.
An independent report recommends that these grounds are dropped, and doctors' agreement should only be required for late-term abortions after 24 weeks.
The Scottish government said it would carefully consider the proposals and women would continue to be supported to access "safe and timely" services.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crre45x7n8jo