NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Married couples across the U.S. have had access to no-fault divorce for more than 50 years, an option many call crucial to supporting domestic abuse victims and key to preventing already crowded family courts from drowning in complicated divorce proceedings.
But some advocates for women worried as old comments from now Vice President-elect JD Vance circulated during the presidential campaign opposing no-fault divorce. And after President-elect Donald Trump and Vance won the election, warnings began popping up on social media urging women who might be considering divorce to ''pull the trigger'' while they still could. Some attorneys posted saying they were seeing a spike in calls from women seeking divorce consultations.
Trump — who is twice-divorced — hasn't championed overhauling the country's divorce laws, but in 2021 Vance lamented that divorce is too easily accessible, as have conservative podcasters and others.
''We've run this experiment in real time and what we have is a lot of very, very real family dysfunction that's making our kids unhappy,'' Vance said during a speech at a Christian high school in California, where he criticized people being able to ''shift spouses like they change their underwear.''
Despite concerns, even those who want to make divorces harder to get say they don't expect big, swift changes. There is not a national coordinated effort underway. And states determine their own divorce laws, so national leaders can't change policy.
''Even in some of the so-called red states, it hasn't gotten anywhere,'' said Beverly Willett, co-chair of the Coalition for Divorce Reform, whose group has unsuccessfully attempted to convince states to repeal their no-fault divorce laws.
Mark A. Smith, a political science professor at the University of Washington, said that while many Americans have become accustomed to no-fault divorce being an option, Vance's previous comments on making it more difficult to separate from a spouse could help jumpstart that effort.
''Even though he's not directly proposing a policy, it's a topic that hasn't gotten a ton of discussion in the last 15 years,'' Smith said. ''And so to have a national profile politician talk that way is noteworthy.''