News

Unanimous Supreme Court preserves access to widely used abortion pill

A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday preserved widespread access to a popular medication abortion pill, the court’s first abortion-related decision since overturning Roe v. Wade two years ago.

After months of high-profile proceedings in the lower courts – at one point the medication, mifepristone, was almost pulled from the market entirely – the case ended in a judicial anticlimax. The justices dismissed the case on procedural grounds, ruling that the plaintiffs did not have the standing, or legal right, to bring the case in the first place. 

Why We Wrote This

The Supreme Court’s ruling on an abortion drug Thursday was procedural, but has big consequences. And reactions to the case illustrate why the abortion issue is likely to reach the court again soon.

In the short term, the narrow ruling preserves widespread access to mifepristone. In the long term, the justices are likely to hear more legal challenges to abortion access. The burden will be on future plaintiffs and lower courts to make sure all the proper judicial procedures are followed.

Many anti-abortion groups noted that the merits of the arguments around mifepristone regulations remain unresolved. The ruling’s most direct consequence is that it preserves mifepristone access as it stood prior to the lawsuit. But abortion rights supporters anticipate more legal battles.

Thursday’s decision has poured even more cold water on the court’s hope that abortion questions would be left to states and their elected representatives.

A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday preserved widespread access to a popular medication abortion pill, the court’s first abortion-related decision since overturning Roe v. Wade two years ago.

After months of high-profile proceedings in the lower courts – at one point the medication, mifepristone, was on the verge of being pulled from the market entirely – the case ended in a judicial anticlimax. The justices dismissed the case on procedural grounds, ruling that the plaintiffs have not suffered the clear and concrete harms necessary, meaning they did not have the legal right, to bring the case in the first place. 

In the short term, the narrow ruling preserves widespread access to mifepristone, a drug that has become more widely used as states have placed more restrictions on surgical abortion in the wake of Roe’s overturning in 2022. In the long term, the justices are likely to hear more legal challenges to abortion access, including a newly postured challenge to mifepristone. The burden will be on future plaintiffs and lower courts to make sure, unlike here, that all the proper judicial procedures are followed.

Why We Wrote This

The Supreme Court’s ruling on an abortion drug Thursday was procedural, but has big consequences. And reactions to the case illustrate why the abortion issue is likely to reach the court again soon.

The decision “does tell us that there are bridges too far when it comes to standing, even for movements and groups with which the court is likely sympathetic. But it tells us very little about what the court thinks substantively about abortion,” says Mary Ziegler, a professor at the University of California, Davis School of Law.

At issue: The FDA and access to abortion medication

The case did have potentially seismic implications. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) first approved mifepristone, part of a two-drug medication abortion regimen, in 2000. Since then, the agency has relaxed restrictions on when doctors can prescribe the drug and how patients can access it.

Medication abortion has also become more common. Two-thirds of all abortions in the United States last year were medication abortions, according to a survey from the Guttmacher Institute. Mifepristone is the most widely used medication abortion drug in the country, according to Guttmacher, because of its strong safety record.

Previous ArticleNext Article