Republican states can move ahead with abortion pill lawsuit
17/1/2025 6:10
Three Republican-led states can go
forward with their lawsuit that seeks to restrict the
availability of the abortion pill mifepristone, a judge ruled on
Thursday.
U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk in Amarillo, Texas,
ruled that Idaho, Missouri and Kansas can continue their case
against the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in his court,
where they last year joined a lawsuit originally brought by
anti-abortion groups and doctors.
Those original plaintiffs dropped their case after the U.S.
Supreme Court found they did not have legal standing to
challenge the FDA's regulation of mifepristone.
The FDA had argued that the states' claims should be
dismissed because, with the original plaintiffs gone, they had
no connection to Kacsmaryk's court.
Mifepristone has been approved by the FDA since 2000 for use
along with another drug, misoprostol, to terminate pregnancy.
Medication abortion accounts for a majority of abortions in the
United States.
In their 2022 lawsuit, the newly formed Texas group Alliance
for Hippocratic Medicine and other abortion opponents sought to
have mifepristone pulled from the market altogether. In April
2023, they won an order from Kacsmaryk granting the request, but
the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, finding it was
too late to challenge the original approval.
The 5th Circuit nonetheless found that the FDA had acted
unlawfully in loosening restrictions on the drug since 2016,
including by approving it for use in the first 10 weeks of
pregnancy, up from seven, and allowing it to be prescribed by
telemedicine and dispensed by mail.
On appeal, the Supreme Court found that the plaintiffs had
no standing because the FDA's actions did not harm them, without
addressing the merits of their case.
Neither Kacsmaryk's nor the 5th Circuit's order was allowed
to take effect while the FDA appealed, and mifepristone's
availability has so far remained unchanged.
The Republican states have argued they have standing to sue
because their Medicaid health insurance programs will likely
have to pay to treat patients who have suffered complications
from using mifepristone. They have also said they should be
allowed to remain in Texas even without the original plaintiffs
because it would be inefficient to send the case to another
court after nearly more than two years of litigation.
A group of Democratic-led states is separately pursuing a
case seeking to block the FDA from imposing any further
restrictions on mifepristone.
It is not clear how Republican President-elect Donald Trump,
who during his first term appointed Kacsmaryk and two of the
three 5th Circuit judges in the case, will handle mifepristone
and the lawsuits over it after taking office next year. Trump
said during his campaign that he would not ban the drug.
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