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SFLAction already working to save lives this election cycle

SFLAction already working to save lives this election cycle


SFLAction already working to save lives this election cycle

Expect to hear from pro-life students between now and Election Day.

In addition to knocking on doors and doing campus outreach and digital campaigns, Kristi Hamrick of Students for Life Action says the organization's national Almost Aborted campaign is ongoing, with storytelling on the good that happens when women choose life.

SFLAction will also be working in battleground states across the country, focusing on getting the youth vote registered, pro-life candidates, and what Hamrick calls radical and extreme ballot initiatives.

She says people tend to think the youth vote is pro-abortion, but the reality is "there's a 30%-40% margin in the youth vote of winnable conservative voices."

Hamrick, Kristi (Students for Life) Hamrick

She mentions a YouGov/Students for Life of America poll conducted earlier this year that shows fewer than one in 10 youth voters supports the Democratic Party's agenda of abortion without limits, with taxpayer funding, up to and including infanticide.

"The Democrats don't like to talk about that," says Hamrick; the heart of their messaging is that abortion will make "bad news" better.

She believes the polling is "really good news for pro-life politicians willing to make the case that there is a better choice than just abortion."

In 2022, with multiple campaigns spanning across key regions, SFLAction exposed pro-abortion radicals by personally texting nearly 3,110,252 voters, making 2,051,680 phone calls, launching #VoteProLifeFirst digital ads that received over 8,988,106 views, and even debating candidates face-to-face.

It was the first time engaging in the elections in any sort of capacity for 55% of over 250 students, and more than 83% of all activists who volunteered with SFLAction that election cycle said they were "very likely" to continue to volunteer in future elections.