Share this @internewscast.com

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday took up a high-stakes legal battle that could lead to a definitive decision on whether the drug most commonly used for medication abortions will continue to be easily available, including by mail.

The court agreed to weigh appeals from the Biden administration and drugmaker Danco defending several Food and Drug Administration decisions that made it easier to access and use the mifepristone pill. Danco makes the brand version of the pill, Mifeprex.

The justices will hear oral arguments early next year, with a ruling due by the end of June.

The Biden administration welcomed the court’s intervention, with White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre saying in a statement that the lower court ruling under review “threatens to undermine the FDA’s scientific independent judgment and would reimpose outdated restrictions on access to safe and effective abortion medication.”

Danco said in a statement that it remains confident in the “safety and effectiveness” of the Mifeprex, which will stay available as normal under the current FDA rules while the Supreme Court hears the case.

“The FDA actions at issue were well supported by extensive safety and effectiveness data from clinical trials and decades worth of real-world experience in millions of patients,” the company’s statement added.

The legal challenge was brought by doctors and other medical professionals represented by the conservative Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom.

“Every court so far has agreed that the FDA acted unlawfully in removing common-sense safeguards for women and authorizing dangerous mail-order abortions,” said Erin Hawley, one of the group’s lawyers. “We urge the Supreme Court to do the same.”

The court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has previously shown hostility to abortion rights, overturning the landmark abortion rights ruling Roe v. Wade last year. But in April, in an earlier stage of the litigation, the court blocked a judge’s ruling that would have completely invalidated the FDA’s approval of the drug.

The abortion pill dispute does not directly address any right to abortion, focusing instead on different legal issues about the FDA’s process for approving drugs, but the case raised questions over the court’s pledge last year to leave abortion policy to the states and the federal government.

The FDA’s original decision in 2000 to approve the drug is not at issue in the Supreme Court, with the court turning away a separate appeal raising that issue.

The court will instead focus on later FDA actions from 2016 onward that made it easier to access the pill, including the initial 2021 decision that made it available by mail, which was finalized earlier this year.

Also under review are the 2016 decisions to extend the window in which mifepristone could be used to terminate pregnancies from seven weeks’ gestation to 10 weeks and reduce the number of in-person visits for patients from three to one. In another 2016 move, the FDA altered the dosing regimen, finding that a lower dose of mifepristone was sufficient.

Another way the court could dispose of the case would be to conclude that the challengers do not have legal standing to bring their lawsuit.

In 2019, the FDA approved a generic form of the drug, which is made by GenBioPro, although that issue is not at issue at the Supreme Court.

The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in August ruled that the post-2016 FDA decisions should be put on hold because the moves “were taken without sufficient consideration of the effects those changes would have on patients.” The court ruled against the challengers on their efforts to overturn the original approval of the drug and the later decision to authorize the generic version.

Both sides then filed appeals at the Supreme Court.

The current fight over the drug dates to a November 2022 lawsuit filed by the challengers. They claim that the FDA’s 2000 approval was flawed, as were later decisions that made the drug easier to access, in part because they failed to take into account safety risks to women. 

In a sweeping decision, Texas-based U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk in April invalidated the FDA’s original approval of the drug from more than 20 years ago. After the Supreme Court put that decision on hold while litigation continued, the appeals court narrowed the scope of Kacsmaryk’s ruling, focusing on the post-2016 changes.

The FDA-approved regimen for a medication abortion involves two drugs: mifepristone, which blocks the hormone progesterone, and misoprostol, which induces contractions. A majority of abortions in the U.S. are carried out using the pills, according to a survey conducted by the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

Access to medication abortion, especially by mail, has become of major importance in light of the Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, which has led to conservative states enacting tough restrictions that either limit or ban abortion outright. Fourteen states currently have total abortion bans, according to Guttmacher.

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
Russia's Putin hosts China's Xi at massive Moscow military parade on Red Square

Putin Welcomes China’s Xi to Grand Military Parade in Moscow’s Red Square

On Friday, Chinese President Xi Jinping was spotted alongside Vladimir Putin while…
DHS Invites You to 'Meet' the Detainees That NJ Democrats Went Ga-Ga Over at ICE Detention Center

Tour the ICE Detention Center and Meet the Detainees Praised by NJ Democrats

Earlier on Friday, some Democratic representatives from New Jersey and the mayor…
Woman in white bikini on a boat.

Horrifying Messages from 24-Year-Old Tourist Beaten to Death at Festival After Being Abducted by Man Who ‘Promised to Make Her Famous’

A TOURIST found dying in a coma after a music festival sent…
Mugshot of Jeffrey Rupnow.

School Shooter’s Father Arrested for Disturbing Attempts to ‘Connect’ with Daughter as New Details Surface

THE dad of a teenage school shooter has been arrested after his…
Mayor of Newark, New Jersey, released after arrest at immigration detention center

Newark, New Jersey Mayor Freed Following Arrest at Immigration Facility

Newark’s Mayor, Ras Baraka, was freed after being held for several hours…
Screenshot of a phone showing a love letter generated by Meta AI.

AI Bot Developed Obsession with Me, Leading Meta to Take Serious Measures

A FATHER of three told how an AI chatbot named Angel fell…
David Steiner speaking at the Securing America's Future Energy conference.

New USPS CEO David Steiner Discusses Agency’s Future and Addresses Concerns Over Potential Service Cuts

David Steiner, the newly named CEO and Postmaster General of the US…
Yankees throttle A's behind Will Warren, Jasson Dominguez

Yankees Dominate A’s with Will Warren and Jasson Dominguez Leading the Charge

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In the setting of a minor league ballpark,…
Presidents Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin at a welcoming ceremony in Moscow.

Body Language Insight: Who Truly Holds Power Between Putin and Xi at the Victory Day Parade?

A TOP body language expert has revealed who is the true “alpha”…
Retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter dies at 85 

Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter passes away at age 85

(The Hill) — Retired Justice David Souter, who served nearly twenty years…
Prince Harry on a phone call, knocking on a door in Fulham.

Prince Harry Accidentally Knocks on Wrong Door While Looking for Friend, Expresses Concerns About Safety in UK Without Police Protection

PRINCE Harry is pictured on a doorbell camera — calling at houses…
Three Pakistan Air Force J-10 fighter jets in flight.

Over 100 Indian and Pakistani Fighter Jets Engaged in Huge Aerial Battle, One of the Largest in Modern Warfare

MORE than 100 Indian and Pakistani fighter jets reportedly clashed in a…