Ironic given that the Bible allows for and condones slavery and is hardly pro-life at all.
The short answer; no. No it does not. It's important to be precise with my answer though. I don't have better words to describe here, but when the Bible talks about slavery it's really talking about it in two major forms: Economic slavery (like the owning and treatment of slaves) and internal slavery (like living with a slave mindset, "being slave to sin", etc). At its core, internal slavery is about one's identity and how an individual views (and rules) themselves.
Regarding economic slavery, the Bible regulated the practice to ensure fair practice and treatment, as that was was normal during that time. It never condones it. It also very clearly condemns the practice of kidnapping and selling people into slavery. As to why it never outright condemns economic slavery altogether, that's because it does regarding its stance on "internal slavery".
Regarding this part, the Bible uses much stronger language. According to the Bible, man was created in God's image and was made to be just like Him, and that defines our identity right from the start. God is not a slave, nor does he operate with any slave mindset of any kind, and combined with the fact that He gave mankind the Earth as their dominion, that fundamentally makes any and all forms of slavery incompatible with Christianity. Let me put it in another perspective. If Jesus is the "King of Kings and Lord of Lords", then who are those lord and kings? You are! And you can't be a king and a slave at the same time.
@mikeymikec As to how Christians loop in slavery with abortion, that's a new one to me. I'm unabashedly pro-life, but I've never once heard that argument in conversation. While an endlessly debated argument (let's not go there), Christians view life as beginning at the point of conception. A 3-minute old fertilized egg is the same as a 3 month old baby which is the same as a 30-year old man. The great majority of abortions that are conducted are for socioeconomic reasons, not health, which makes the idea of abortion very disgusting in the eyes of Christians.
I wondered whether this was a dig at my OP, and on that vein I'd be interested to see what percentage of pro-lifers haven't in some way had a religious upbringing (even if their parents didn't actively go out of their way to do so but were brought up with a religious background). I'd bet it's less than 5%.
I was an Atheist and pro-choice for a while, but I was raised in a Christian household. I have since returned to the faith, but my pro-life stance took root after I had a miscarriage with an old girlfriend. Something about that event really shook me to the core, and I realized that while in my eyes I just wanted to bang my hot girlfriend (dude, she was super hot), it's also how life is created. I changed my ways and outlook on abortion after that.
I'll never know my child I lost in this life, but I look forward to meeting him in heaven.