2006 elections The 2006 midterm elections were moderately successful for the SBA list. Twenty-one out of 38 endorsed candidates won their contests, for a success rate of 55%
2008 presidential election The SBA List gained renewed attention during the
2008 United States presidential election following
Sarah Palin's nomination for
Vice President. In 2008, the SBA List also started a
social networking service and blog called "Team Sarah", which is "dedicated to advancing the values that Sarah Palin represents in the political process". Palin headlined the organization's 2010 "Celebration of Life" breakfast fundraiser, an event which got extensive media coverage and in which she coined the term "
mama grizzly". According to
Politico, Palin's criteria for endorsing candidates is whether they have the support of the
Tea Party movement and whether they have the support of the SBA List.
2009 elections In the
2009 special election to fill the vacant House seat for the
New York's 23rd congressional district in
upstate New York, the group endorsed
Doug Hoffman, the candidate of the
Conservative Party of New York, over the Republican candidate,
Dede Scozzafava, who favors abortion rights. The SBA List spent over $100,000 on Hoffman's behalf, joining with the
National Organization for Marriage and other socially conservative groups in supporting Hoffman's campaign.
2010 elections For the 2010 elections, the SBA List planned to spend $6 million, (including $3 million solely on
U.S. Senate races, and endorsed several dozen candidates. The SBA List spent nearly $1.7 million on
independent expenditure campaigns for or against 50 candidates. The SBA List conducted a 23-city bus tour to the Congressional districts of self-described "pro-life" Democrats in
Ohio,
Indiana and
Pennsylvania who voted for the health care reform bill and to rally supporters to vote them out. The bus tour attracted counterprotests at some stops, such as one in Pennsylvania where a group called
Catholics United accused the SBA List of lying about health care reform. The organization launched a "Life Speaking Out" petition to urge the Republican Party to include opposition to abortion in its
Pledge to America. The petition was sent with over 20,000 signatures on it. In the
California Senate race, the group endorsed
Carly Fiorina against incumbent Senator
Barbara Boxer, and spent slightly under $235,000 in
independent expenditures in support of Fiorina. The SBA List partnered with the
National Organization for Marriage to air
Spanish-language TV commercials attacking Boxer's positions on abortion and gay marriage. However, Boxer prevailed over Fiorina in the November 2010 election. Other notable endorsements included
Sharron Angle, who unsuccessfully
challenged incumbent Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid in
Nevada; the SBA List endorsed Angle despite having previously endorsed Angle's
primary opponent,
Sue Lowden. In September 2010, the SBA List launched a $150,000 campaign on behalf of
New Hampshire Senate candidate
Kelly Ayotte for the
Republican primary. Ayotte won the primary to become the nominee, and later prevailed in the general election. In October 2010, the SBA List endorsed
Joe Miller, Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate in Alaska. The SBA List endorsed Miller after Sen.
Lisa Murkowski decided to stage a write-in campaign after losing the
Republican primary to Miller, and they launched a $10,000 radio campaign to air ads attacking Murkowski for turning a "deaf ear" to the will of voters who voted her out in the primary. Murkowski defeated Miller, who conceded after two months of court battles over contested ballots.
Driehaus political ad litigation In the 2010 campaign, the organization purchased
billboard advertisements in the district of Rep.
Steve Driehaus of Ohio that showed a photo of Driehaus and intoned,
"Shame on Steve Driehaus! Driehaus voted FOR taxpayer-funded abortion" The SBA List has taken the position that the legislation in question allows for taxpayer-funded abortion, a claim which was ruled by a judge to be factually incorrect. In response, Driehaus, who represented Ohio's heavily anti-abortion
1st congressional district, filed a complaint with the Ohio Elections Commission (OEC), saying the advertisements were false and violated Ohio election law. The OEC ruled in Driehaus' favor in a probable cause hearing on October 14, 2010. In response, the SBA List asked a federal judge to issue an injunction against the OEC on the grounds that the law at issue stifles free speech and that its ads were based on the group's own interpretation of the law. A federal judge rejected the SBA List's federal lawsuit on
abstention grounds and allowed Driehaus's OEC complaint to move forward. After the OEC complaint was filed, the SBA List began airing a radio ad in Driehaus's district in which Dannenfelser stated that the group "[would] not be silenced or intimidated" by Driehaus's legal action. Driehaus persuaded the billboard company to withdraw the SBA List's advertisement, which was never erected. Driehaus lost the seat to
Steve Chabot, the incumbent whom Driehaus had defeated two years earlier, in the November general election. Driehaus sued the SBA List in a second case on December 3, 2010, accusing the organization of
defamation that caused him a "loss of livelihood". The List continued to seek to have the law in question overturned; the ACLU joined in the organization's fight against the law. On August 1, 2011, judge
Timothy Black dismissed the SBA List's challenge to the Ohio law, holding that the federal court lacked jurisdiction since the billboards were never erected and the OEC never made a final ruling and denied a
motion for summary judgment by the List in the defamation case, allowing Driehaus's defamation claims regarding other SBA List statements to go forward. Black also directed the SBA List to desist from claiming on its website that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) subsidized abortion as the law does not directly mention abortion. SBA List argued that its statements were opinions and were thus protected, but the court rejected this argument given that SBA List itself had claimed that this was a "fact". On August 19, 2011, the SBA List appealed the decision on the Ohio law to the
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. In May 2013, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the SBA List could not challenge the law under the First Amendment. On August 9, 2013, the SBA List petitioned the
United States Supreme Court to review the law. On January 10, 2014, the Supreme Court accepted the case. The Court heard the case on April 22, 2014. On June 16, 2014, the
United States Supreme Court ruled 9–0 in SBA List's favor, allowing them to proceed in challenging the constitutionality of the law. On September 11, 2014, Judge
Timothy Black of the
United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio struck down the law as unconstitutional. Black said in his ruling, "We do not want the government (i. e., the Ohio Elections Commission) deciding what is political truth — for fear that the government might persecute those who criticize it. Instead, in a democracy, the voters should decide."
2011 elections In October 2011, the SBA List announced it would involve itself in the
2011 Virginia state Senate elections, endorsing challengers Bryce Reeves against
Edd Houck,
Caren Merrick against
Barbara Favola for an open seat, Patricia Phillips against
Mark Herring, and incumbent Sen.
Jill Vogel in an effort to flip control of the state Senate, which the group described as a "graveyard for pro-life legislation". It also announced it was spending $25,000 against Sen.
Edd Houck to expose his "extreme record on abortion". Merrick and Phillips lost, but Vogel won re-election and Reeves defeated Houck by just 222 votes.
2012 presidential election In 2011, the SBA List began to ask
2012 Republican presidential candidates to sign a pledge to appointing only anti-abortion judicial nominees and cabinet members, preventing taxpayer funding of abortion, and supporting legislation to ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy based on the
fetal pain concept. Candidates
Rick Perry,
Tim Pawlenty,
Michele Bachmann,
Newt Gingrich,
Rick Santorum,
Thaddeus McCotter,
Herman Cain, and
Ron Paul all signed the pledge, but
Mitt Romney,
Jon Huntsman, Jr., and
Gary Johnson declined. Romney's refusal (he said the pledge might have "unintended consequences") sparked heated criticism from the SBA List, some of the other candidates, and political observers given Romney's past support for legalized abortion. Huntsman said he would not sign any pledges from political groups during the campaign, and was criticized by the SBA List as well. Cain later signed the pledge in November 2011. Johnson, who supports abortion rights, declined. In August 2011, the SBA List, along with the
Family Research Council and
National Organization for Marriage, conducted a "Values Voter Bus Tour" in
Iowa ahead of the
Iowa Straw Poll. Candidates Pawlenty, Bachmann, and Santorum and other Republican elected officials, including
Iowa Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds and Reps.
Steve King and
Louie Gohmert, joined. The SBA List endorsed Rick Santorum for the nomination, spending $512,000 on his behalf. After Romney became the presumptive nominee for the Republican Party, the SBA List declared that former Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice was unqualified for vice president due to her describing herself as "mildly pro-choice". In August, SBA released an ad featuring anti-abortion activist Melissa Ohden who says she survived an abortion in 1977. The ad criticized
Barack Obama, saying that while serving in the
Illinois Senate, he voted four times to deny medical care to infants
born alive during failed abortion procedures. In a 2008 analysis,
FactCheck drew a mixed conclusion overall, finding both the SBA List and Obama had made misleading and/or inaccurate comments regarding Obama's voting record on the topic in question while he served in the
United States Senate.
2013 Virginia gubernatorial election The SBA List made the
2013 Virginia gubernatorial election a priority for 2013, endorsing
Ken Cuccinelli and pledging to spend $1.5 million in the election through its Virginia PAC,
Women Speak Out. Cuccinelli was defeated narrowly in the general election by Democratic nominee
Terry McAuliffe.
2014 elections The SBA List sought to spend $8 million to $10 million on elections in 2014.
2016 elections The SBA List spent $18 million in the
2016 elections.
2017 elections SBAL endorsed
Karen Handel in the
June 2017 special election for Georgia's 6th congressional district, spending $90,000 to support Handel.
2018 elections The SBA List typically endorses Republicans, but in 2018 they endorsed Democrat
Dan Lipinski in a primary election against his challenger,
Marie Newman, who favors abortion rights. The SBA List spent six figures on direct mail and other advertising for Lipinski in his
primary, and sent a 70-person canvassing team to turn out voters for Lipinski. Lipinski is one of the few Democrats left that the group considers an ally, and Dannenfelser called him "a pro-life hero of legendary courage and integrity". was credited with helping him win.
2022 rebranding In June 2022, the group rebranded as Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America. The new name is intended to parallel the name of
NARAL Pro-Choice America.
2024 elections According to a Reuters report from July 2024, Marjorie Dannenfelser, President of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, warned the Republican National Committee and Donald Trump to not weaken language on the party's platform referring to the federal government's role in restricting abortion access. Specifically, she warned that "it would be a miscalculation that would hurt party unity and destroy pro-life enthusiasm" before the 2024 election. According to a Fox News report published October 30, 2024, the Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America engaged more than 1,000 students, as well as other canvassers of various ages and backgrounds, to reach out to persuadable voters in battleground states. The report also states that the non-profit raised $92 million and engaged canvassers to knock on more than 4 million doors in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Montana, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. One million of these door knocking visits were made by student canvassers. Their messaging was centered on the grounds that "Vice President Kamala Harris is too extreme on abortion." ==See also==