This is an update on an item we covered in Sunday’s Week Ahead post, when we discussed the mifepristone case that has landed on the Supreme Court’s shadow docket. It’s the new face of conservative efforts to impose a nationwide ban on abortion. The Supreme Court claims it stays out of politics. Recently, Chief Justice John Roberts bemoaned people who view the justices as political actors. In granting a post-decision motion to immediately finalize its opinion in Callais, Justice Alito rejected Justice Jackson’s charge that the conservative majority was behaving in a fashion that would look partisan to the public. Mifepristone is used in about 60% of abortions nationwide, so banning the drug is essential if conservatives want to curtail medication abortion. In the Louisiana case before the Court, the state argues it’s not able to enforce its ban because pregnant people can obtain the drug via telehealth and use it to induce an abortion. One of the unexpected consequences of Dobbs has been the effect of medication abortion. And the decision itself continues to have toxicity for Republicans, even if Dobbs didn’t cost them the 2024 presidential election. Donald Trump himself pussyfoots around it, changing position as necessary. That’s the context for the new mifepristone case we’ve been following. Justice Alito entered a temporary administrative stay to keep the Louisiana law banning telehealth and mail order from going into effect, which we noted Sunday evening in The Week Ahead, “ends on Monday. That means that unless the Supreme Court issues an order regarding whether the injunction should stay in place while the litigation proceeds, the Fifth Circuit’s ban on obtaining the abortion drug via telehealth goes into effect.” Yesterday was Monday. But the Court didn’t act. Instead, it just gave itself more time, with Justice Alito extending the stay until Thursday. It’s possible that the Court is close and needs a little more time to reach a decision. There has been some thought it might set the case for argument on the merits as early as next month, or more realistically, next term, and decide it on the merits quickly, at least as courts count time. But given the political weight of the issue in a midterm election year, the Court could also return to its history with mifepristone: kicking the can down the road. That’s what they did when the Texas case, Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA, came before it in June 2024, deciding that the plaintiffs lacked standing and dismissing the case, instead of ruling on the substantive issue. What will the Court do now? We don’t know for certain. On Thursday we may learn whether it intends to find an off-ramp, like lack of standing, again or deal with the substance of the issues around mifepristone access post-Dobbs. There are a number of issues embedded in the case, including:
We could see anything from an unsigned decision permitting the law to go into effect while the litigation proceeds to something more substantive. But if the Court goes the latter route, it’s unlikely it would dig too deep without actually hearing the case, which is what it did in Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, before it dismissed it. Louisiana isn’t the only state trying to challenge access to mifepristone in the run-up to the midterm elections. But despite the insistence of anti-choice activists, a 2023 poll showed 63% of Americans favored access to the drug, up from 50% in 2020. It turns out, Republicans didn’t win the war when they got the Supreme Court to reverse Roe v. Wade. Many Americans want to maintain the ability to make their own choices about their own bodies and are continuing to find ways to do so. One final note on what’s happening here: Last September, Trump’s FDA announced a “comprehensive review” of mifepristone, citing a “lack of adequate consideration” in prior approvals. That, of course, is bunk. Mifepristone has been on the market since 2000, safe, studied, and successfully used to treat women in situations including miscarriage as well as abortion. But likely because of the politics of the issue and the insistence of abortion foes that the drug be made unavailable, the Trump administration has the review underway. In fact, the district judge stayed the case pending the outcome of the review. The Court might decide to follow suit and play for time as well, staying out of the fray and letting the executive branch of government take this one on. There may be some hint of that in the ongoing FDA review process. CNN reported earlier last week that Trump was preparing to oust the head of the FDA, Dr. Marty Makary. “Notably, senior White House staffers were scheduled to meet with anti-abortion activists Friday who have sharply criticized both Makary and Trump personally over a lack of action on restricting mifepristone.” Today, there were reports that Makary had resigned after weeks of threats that Trump would fire him. A tweet from Illinois Democratic Senator Dick Durbin credited his forced departure to his anti-vape stance. But The New York Times reported, “Dr. Makary also faced repeated calls for his firing from abortion foes who accused him of dragging out the timetable for a study of the safety of mifepristone, an abortion drug, viewing the exercise as one that could support their efforts to restrict the drug’s distribution.” Republican Senator Josh Hawley from Missouri tweeted: “This is welcome news. Dr. Makary was uniquely destructive to the prolife movement. He attempted to place pro-abortion lawyers in key positions. He slow walked a vitally necessary review of the abortion drug mifepristone. He used his discretion to approve a new abortion drug when the data shows it sends 1 in 10 women to the emergency room. He froze out prolife leaders and repeatedly stonewalled Congress. His resignation is an opportunity for the FDA to reset.” Regardless of what the last straw for Makary was, Durbin’s words have force: “I voted for Dr. Makary to head the FDA based upon his commitment to say ‘no’ if President Trump asked him to do something that would harm America. We’ll find out on Thursday whether he has inspired any of the justices on the Supreme Court. When things move fast—and right now they really are—having a trusted place to turn to for clear, timely analysis matters. I hope I can be one of those places for you. Paid subscribers make my work possible, and in return, our community gets exactly that: substantive coverage of the issues that affect our lives, from someone who’s spent a career inside these systems. That kind of access is worth investing in. We’re in this together, Joyce |