In 1969, before Roe v. Wade was decided, the organization founded itself as the National Association for the Repeal of Abortion Laws. After Roe was decided in 1973, it changed its name to the National Abortion Rights Action League.
In 1993, the group changed its name again to the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League. That changed to NARAL Pro-Choice America in 2003 when the organization geared up for the 2004 presidential election.
Despite all these name changes, the organization's primary goal is still to expand abortion and enable the deaths of innocent unborn children.
NARAL president Mini Timmaraju explained the newest change to New York Times reporter Lisa Lerer. Lerer reported that the change targets younger demographics; particularly younger male voters. The group hopes to sway voters by further separating the political debate from the rights of unborn children.
“NARAL is incredibly resonant for the political world, but we’re not necessarily in the business anymore of just winning political opinion within elected officials and policymakers,” Ms. Timmaraju said. “We are now in a much bigger fight for the heart and soul of the American people and those are folks who are brand-new to the abortion debate.”
Lerer's report also announced that the organization hopes to enact pro-abortion policies by pushing to eliminate the Senate filibuster, opposing voter ID laws, and asking pro-abortion administrations to add more justices to the US Supreme Court.
Lerer also suggests, "The abortion rights movement has shifted its message from talking about abortion as health care to casting the legality of the procedure as an American liberty. It’s a message NARAL has been pushing since 2018, when an internal research project found the argument to be the most broadly persuasive."
Abortion is an act that ends human lives. It deprives these humans of all rights, including personal liberty. No matter how many times NARAL changes, it fails to recognize the humanity of unborn children. In doing so, it continues to promote death.