EU won’t create new abortion fund but green-lights existing money for abortion access

Bryan Lawrence Gonsalves By Bryan Lawrence Gonsalves for EWTN News

Pro-life leaders say the European Commission’s decision misuses EU social funding and compels taxpayers to finance abortion against their convictions.

EU won’t create new abortion fund but green-lights existing money for abortion access
The Berlaymont building in Brussels, seat of the European Commission. | Credit: EmDee/Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0)

BRUSSELS — The European Commission has rejected a proposal to create a new European Union-wide financing mechanism for abortion access but said existing EU funds may still be used by member states to support women traveling abroad for abortion services.

The decision, announced Feb. 26, comes in response to the European Citizens’ Initiative “My Voice, My Choice,” which gathered nearly 1.2 million verified signatures and called for an EU funding scheme to help women access abortion in countries where it is legal.

While declining to introduce a new legal instrument, the commission said member states could instead use the European Social Fund Plus (ESF+), a 142.7-billion-euro program primarily intended to support employment and reduce poverty, to finance abortion-related travel and services if permitted under national law.

Legal and ethical concerns

Speaking to EWTN News, Vincenzo Bassi, president of the Federation of Catholic Family Associations in Europe, reaffirmed the Catholic Church’s long-standing position that abortion cannot be recognized as a right and should not be permitted. He said the potential use of EU funds in this area runs “diametrically opposed to the spirit and objectives” of the 2014 European Citizens’ Initiative “One of Us,” which gathered 1.7 million signatures in support of stronger protections for unborn life.

Bassi added that “it is unacceptable that European taxpayers should be required to finance abortion practices, even in those member states where abortion is considered illegal,” explaining that directing EU funding toward abortion access would compel citizens to support practices they fundamentally oppose.

Grégor Puppinck, director general of the European Centre for Law and Justice (ECLJ), told EWTN News that the commission did not fully implement the demands of “My Voice, My Choice” because abortion policy lies outside EU competence and several member states opposed expanding Brussels’ authority. However, he said the commission effectively bypassed those limits by allowing member states to use the European Social Fund to support cross-border abortion access.

“This decision by the commission is a misuse of the Social Fund, which was never intended for this purpose,” Puppinck said. The ECLJ, he added, is preparing a legal analysis of the decision and intends to challenge it in court.

Antanas Urma, regional director of ProLife Europe for Poland and the Baltic States, said the commission’s position highlights deeper moral and political tensions within the European project. Urma additionally explained that Europe’s historical experience should reinforce a shared moral commitment to protect every human life, including the unborn.

Debate expected to continue

The commission’s decision means the EU will not create a centralized abortion funding program, but the possibility of using existing funds ensures the issue will remain a subject of political and ethical debate.

Because the European Social Fund Plus operates through national programs, individual member states will ultimately decide whether and how to allocate funding for abortion-related services, leaving the future implementation of the commission’s position uncertain.

The outcome reflects the European Union’s ongoing effort to balance institutional coordination with national sovereignty on deeply contested moral questions, particularly as abortion laws continue to vary widely across the bloc.


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