Is This the Supreme Court's Next Big Abortion Case?
Plus: An impressive book by a Supreme Court justice.
Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously rejected an effort by anti-abortion activists to rescind the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) approval of the abortion drug mifepristone, holding that the activists lacked legal standing to challenge the determination made by federal regulators that the pill was safe and effective for use.
Now, a group of Republican-led states is seeking to revive the case, claiming that their respective state bans on abortion are being undermined by the nationwide mail-order availability of the abortion pill. If these states can convince the lower courts that they possess the requisite legal standing to sue, their case against mifepristone could easily end up back before the Supreme Court.
You’re reading Injustice System from Damon Root and Reason. Get more of Damon’s commentary on constitutional law and American history.
The case is Missouri v. FDA. After the Supreme Court's 2024 ruling in FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, which said that anti-abortion groups and activists "do not have standing to sue simply because others are allowed to engage in certain activities," the states of Missouri, Kansas, and Idaho crafted their own updated legal challenge, which focused on the alleged harms suffered by the states themselves. This strategy was concocted for the purpose of passing muster under the rationale of the Court's 2024 decision.
Last week, Florida and Texas filed a motion seeking to join that lawsuit. In addition to repeating the types of arguments first made by the anti-abortion Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine—such as the assertion that the FDA's original approval of mifepristone "did not rest on a good faith analysis of the drug's anticipated effect on public health"—Florida and Texas argue that the FDA has enabled a "mail-order abortion economy in all 50 states" that has forced anti-abortion states "to divert resources to address the explosion of abortion drugs mailed to their residents" from out of state. In other words, Florida and Texas want the federal courts to impose a uniform national standard that eliminates access to abortion pills in all 50 states in order to keep those pills from reaching Florida and Texas.
Since the Supreme Court never actually ruled on the merits of whether or not the FDA's original authorization of mifepristone was proper, this state-led lawsuit could provide the Court with a more acceptable vehicle for doing so, assuming that the case manages to move sufficiently forward in the lower courts. On the other hand, if the Supreme Court is truly serious about leaving the matter of abortion up to the states, it will, when the time comes, reject this obvious effort by anti-abortion states to control what happens inside of states where abortion remains legal.
Missouri v. FDA is still in its early stages at this point, but it's definitely a case to watch. Depending on how things shake out in the months ahead, it could become the Supreme Court's next big abortion battle.
Odds & Ends: An Impressive Book by a Supreme Court Justice
The recent news that Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett will be publishing a book this fall, titled Listening to the Law: Reflections on the Court and the Constitution, got me thinking about some of my favorite entries in the niche literary genre of books written by SCOTUS members. To my surprise, the first book that sprang to mind, and then actually maintained something of a lead even after further reflection, was Stephen Breyer's slim 2021 volume The Authority of the Court and the Peril of Politics.
Thinking of Breyer's book first surprised me because I am not exactly Breyer's biggest fan. However, as I noted in my review of what I called his "timely and important" book, the liberal justice offered an eloquent and learned argument against court packing that was all the more effective because it was directed against his "side" of the political divide. "The 83-year-old Supreme Court justice is well aware that many modern liberals want President Joe Biden to pack the Court with new members for the express purpose of creating a new liberal supermajority," I wrote. "Breyer thinks those court packers are being both dimwitted and shortsighted."
Breyer took a lot of flack at the time from liberal activists over his anti-court packing position. His commitment to principle over partisanship impressed me then, and still impresses me now.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please to post comments
Is This the Supreme Court's Next Big Abortion Case?
Not a fan of the clickbait-esque title.
Yeah, quite unlikely but the title will certainly stir up the crowd and provide grist for their pols.
Some nations won’t let foreigners enter if the guest intends to promote the act pf killing unborn children. Kudos to them for keep dealthcult garbage out.
Kudos to Chumpy-Chump-Chimp for Worshitting the Sacred Fartilized Egg Smells and the fartuses!
I do wonder, though, if the fartilized egg smells of chimps, gorillas, whales, cats, dogs, rabbits, rats, and mice are also unborn children? We are all God's Children, right? Who gets to decide these things, and how? Other than by making self-righteous noises and grabbing the Sacred Power To Punish the "wrong people", who apparently just don't matter, HOW do The Pervfected Ones decide?
Unread
The first I muted; crazy as a shithouse rat.
The death cult is the junk science crowd running HHS today.
Oh and a fetus isn't a child.
The Florida-Texas case puts me in mind of the failed suit by Nebraska and Oklahoma against Colorado, on the grounds that Colorado's legalization of marijuana made it more difficult for the other two states to enforce their prohibitions on the stuff. The Supreme Court shot that one down 6–2 (with Thomas and Alito dissenting). This one has a similar feel: FL and TX are arguing that the federal government shouldn't allow any conduct that might make it difficult for a state to enforce one of its strictest laws.
I don't see why these states can't ban the OTC or internet sale of this product and be done with it. Sure you could open a PO box in a border town but just because people can break the law doesn't mean you get to decide for other states.
I believe that they have banned it but certain states( New York comes to mind) have passed laws that atate that they will not honor charges by states that have banned the abortion drugs and will not extradite doctors or pharmacists that provide the drugs to residents of states that ban them. The simple compromise would be to honor the states that ban the drugs and extradite the doctors and pharmacists that provide residents of the states that ban these drugs with these drugs.
"extradite the doctors and pharmacists"
They have committed no crime.
Under the state laws of Florida and Texas they have.
"...both dimwitted and shortsighted."
In this instance, I concur with the late Justice.
Mifepristone is safe and effective. It has much lower complications than pregnancy. Mifepristone is even more needed in red states who have partially criminalized medical care for pregnant women. The US has a higher infant/mother mortality rate than our peer countries. This ban would make it worse.
MAGA is a death cult.
"Mifepristone is safe and effective."
Agreed! However, the medical "experts" (actually self-regarded experts about EVERYTHING) on the SCROTUS will now be given a chance to over-rule doctors and the FDA! Why do we even have an FDA if it is mere window dressing for the TRUE Experts on the SCROTUS?
Typical short-sighted partisan response. The argument against Mifepristone is that it is "safe and effective" at killing fetuses. It's like a gunnie arguing against gun control on the grounds that guns are "safe and effective" which is exactly the gun control argument.
Fetuses have no rights. They aren't persons. And they haven't been born so they aren't citizens.
Retard and racist.
I've muted both of those imbeciles as they are just not worth the effort of even seeing whatever drivel they post.
The shit eating sqrlsy is muted. Tony 2.0 still available for ridicule.
Your namecalling confirms that they are correct. If you had an argument based on facts and logic you would have presented it.
Mifepristone is safe and effective.
At doing what?
Terminating clumps of cells and causing bleeding in parking lots.
clumps of cells
lol, we're still doing that huh? How quaint.
Yes, clumps of cells. Get over it.
But that's not what they are and you know it. So does the entire medical/biological world. The only people still desperately clinging to this lie are the ones desperately trying to keep rationalizing their overt lie.
Or...
Perhaps you're making the argument that YOU TOO are nothing but a clump of cells. I guess that's another way to look at it, isn't it. Humanity doesn't exist, nobody is a "person," rights don't exist at all - we're all just walking talking clumps of cells.
Is that it?
At setting FREE from Lying Lothario, the lied-to babes!
See “Lying Lothario” details here… http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Jesus_Validated/
THE “LYING LOTHARIO” PROBLEM: Well, a lot of pro-lifers are men, and I would bet that even those pro-lifers who are women? Very few of them have found themselves in the following shoes: Lying Lothario endlessly says “Love ya, babe, Love-ya, Love-ya, Love-ya, NOW can I get down your pants?” After she falls for him and he gets her pregnant, the abuse (from him) begins, and she finds out that he has 7 other “Love-ya, Babe, my One and Only” babes on the side, 4 of them also pregnant by him! So abortion is “veto power” against scumbucket men. If these behavioral genes get passed on and on, humans will evolve into something like elephant seals, where the men most skilled at lying and fighting off the other lying men, get a harem of 40 babes, and the rest of the men get nothing (other than caring for the resulting babies)! So abortion is empowering women to fight off this sort of thing… And reserve their baby-making powers for men who are less lying scum, and will actually make good fathers to the children.
So they want to “capitally punish” the “offenders” (abortion-providing doctors, so as to “dry up” the sources for safe abortions), while they have never been in the above-described (lied-to female) shoes! Willfully blind self-righteousness, basically…
Or maybe some of the anti-abortion men fantasize and lust after being the elephant-seal-like men who can gather the baby-making powers of a harem of 40 lied-to women, under the new scheme of things?
I am glad that SOME you oppose theft. Theft by deception is also theft; I hope you can see that! When a severely lying Lothario-type dude (as described above) appropriates the baby-making powers of a deceived young woman, that, too, is theft! Abortion is anti-theft, when a deceived woman no longer wants to rent out her womb to a deceptive scumbag, prospective god-awful supposed "father" of a sperm donor!
Those who are anti-abortion unmarried men should be out there desperately courting women who have already been deceived by scumbucket men, and volunteering to raise these unborn children (who are NOT your biological offspring), to fend off a HUGE root cause of abortion, and to put your money where your mouth is! And married anti-abortion men? Check with your wives; see if they mind you donating all of your spare time and money to helping out these future unmarried moms! THESE actions will relieve the pressures towards abortions!
So you didn't read it.
Thanks for admitting your ignorance. Par for the course.
I don't disagree with Root's reasoning about the chances of a national ban of milfepristone. I do take umbrage at his repeated use of "anti-abortion activists" to describe one side.
That's fine, but you better describe the other side as "pro-abortion activists" and not "natal care advocates" or whatever the fuck euphemism the baby killers are trying to use this week.
What are missing is the dimensions of the argument. For the antiabortionist there is one dimension and that is no abortions. For the other side there are two dimensions have a baby or terminate the pregnancy. Hence the name "pro choice".
I could just as easily call one side "pro baby" since they support the baby's life. And considering how many people just want to limit abortions to the first trimester or life of the mother, anti-abortion isn't even accurate.
All of this is intentional framing by the left, and I'm tired of it. It's not gender-affirming care, it's child mutilation. It's not persons experiencing homelessnessness, it's junkies. Perhaps you haven't noticed, but the left's stranglehold on the framing of the debate was aborted last year. Good riddance.
Well the term pro baby doesn't really work. You may not have noticed but abortion levels have increased and not decreeased since the Dobbs decision. The real impacts of state anti-abortion laws has fallen on pregnant women who want their babies but can not get care for when pregnancy complication arise. Hardly pro-baby.
Almost all of those cases have been doctors/hospitals not doing their fucking jobs and trying to hide under the skirt of the law.
No, doctor are hamstrung by lawmakers that neither know nor care about women's health.
there is one dimension and that is no abortions.
That's patently false. It's as if that 75% of Americans that Reason kept touting as 'fine with abortion' didn't feel uncomfortable when the crying 28 week old clump of cells got an ice pick in the skull because freedom.
For the other side there are two dimensions have a baby or terminate the pregnancy. Hence the name "pro choice".
While this is one way of describing it, there is a lot of evidence (hell, I can just look back to the 2024 DNC convention) that the 'pro-choice' crowd is an anti-natalist death cult, with throngs of childless cat ladies demanding if any abortion can occur, it must occur.
No no, there’s only nuance on the side M4E supports.
There are no baby killers here. Fetuses aren't babies. Deal with it.
I find the FL and TX argument that they are forced "to divert resources to address the explosion of abortion drugs mailed to their residents", absurd. The fact is there is little if any resources either state is forced to divert. The complication rate for medical abortions that would require a hospital visit is less than 1%. In the comparison to the resources states expend it is likely not even noticeable.
I find the FL and TX argument that they are forced "to divert resources to address the explosion of abortion drugs mailed to their residents", absurd.
It is absurd and I'm always slightly amused at how anti-abortion activists have learned so much from their counterparts on the left. I can't help but at least raise my glass and say, "Well played".
Nothing says LIMITED Gov Republicans better than demanding MORE Government in Medicine! /s
Pro-Life is a 'Left' activist movement at its origins and it shows.
Why can't you people just donate your organs to save the helpless 'poor'? /s
I dunno... Maybe because the helpless don't have any rights to my organs?
In other words, Florida and Texas want the federal courts to impose a uniform national standard that eliminates access to abortion pills in all 50 states in order to keep those pills from reaching Florida and Texas.
Honestly, if that's the goal, we should just be pushing Congress to Schedule I or II it under the CSA.
But let me ask you a serious question about Florida and Texas: why shouldn't they? Do Florida and Texas not have a reasonable request? I'm not saying SCOTUS is necessarily the place to hash it out, and they didn't seem inclined to take up the issue when it was Nebraska complaining about Colorado's interstate marijuana trafficking (although Clarence was not too happy about them turning their original jurisdiction into discretionary jurisdiction).
But at the end of the day, we ARE talking about interstate trafficking of lethal drugs. Not just any drugs that might be abused recreationally - we're talking about drugs that are intentionally designed and intended specifically to kill people. Similar to Nebraska/Colorado, Illinois (specifically Chicago) likes to point the finger at Ohio and Indiana when it comes to the importing of firearms that have been explicitly banned/restricted there - and the left would love to see something done about that because of their potential for harm to Chicagoans.
Ohio and Indiana (and Colorado) might rightfully be able to counter that and say, "Whoa, hey, we can't control it if they make their way there, but it's not like we're trying to kill anyone."
The same is not true for mifepristone. That is in fact its singular intent. The "we can't help it if something legal in our state harms someone in yours" argument is gone - because Florida and Texas have a legitimate interest in protecting its citizenry against a knowingly lethal drug whose only purpose is to cause the intentional termination of a human.
And that might be precisely WHY the Supremes decide to take it up this time around.
Finally, from the libertarian angle, why is their request unreasonable? Why is it unreasonable that if State A says "We'll allow it," and State B says "We will not" that a person who wants something should have to go to State A to get it - even if they then personally traffic it back to State B for their own personal use?
Think of it like, hilariously, lottery tickets. If you're in Florida and you want to play the Georgia lottery - you have to go to Georgia to get your tickets. Not only is it unreasonable (and an entitlement mentality) to think they should be mailed to you, it's illegal to do so.
Why should this be any different?
But you realize these are the same people who tried to make it illegal for state residents to leave to get an abortion in a state where it's legal.
That's a separate issue entirely.
You need to read up a little more on mifepristone. It primary use is in medical abortions but it also have additional on label and off label uses.
You know what else had off-label uses?
Zyklon B?
Methotrexate is used off label as first line treatment to save the lives of women who have ectopic pregnancies. Much of the anti-abortion movement wants those women to die.
The only people who want women to die are Muslims and LGBT enablers.
Half the goal of the anti-abortion movement is to protect the lives of women. The other half is to protect their progeny. The pro-abortion movement wants to see both of them destroyed.
Super duper. Then there should be no reason not to include a doctor's note explaining the non-abortive intended usage (on label or off label) when it's sent in the mail. Also, it should probably be mailed directly to a medical provider in the case of off-label usage so that the drug can be properly dispensed and the patient can be properly monitored.
"lethal drugs"
Cancer drugs are far more dangerous and we ship them across state lines all the time.
"it's illegal to do so"
Because states want to protect their monopolies. A very un-libertarian thing to support. But you are one of the most un-libertarian commenters here. Why are you here on a site that is supposed to be about freedom?
Cancer drugs are far more dangerous
They're actually not.
Because states want to protect their monopolies.
On what? Their statehood?
Just admit that you don't even WANT 50 United States. You want "America," run by a benevolent dictator.
is-this-the-supreme-courts-next-big-abortion-case/?
Well lets hope so!... if there's one thing this country need more of is endless litigation killing preborn humans.
I mean - if the abortion debate isn't on tap at all times how can dem fundraising continue? Of course it helps R fundraising too but I think most of their constituents would be fine if the issue went away and children were allowed to be born. The true fanatics will always want to be able to "shout their abortion!!!!"
"If there's one thing this country need more of is endless litigation"... on how Personal Issues are matters of the State.
So Killary has of course weighed in on this non story; but of course can be expected to capitalize on a case that has hardly begun to "if could" it's way to the supreme court [which grants cert to 1% of cases filed]. Ditto Obergefell. I sometimes think it's Democrats behind these specious suits just to whip them up some fear and outrage.
A few years ago, the SCOTUS made the prudent decision to let the individual states to decide if killing an unborn child is suitable for them instead of handing down a ham-handed judgement making the issue of abortion legally all across the US.
It was sort of like allowing the states to decide if they want a death penalty for convicted violent felons.
Ergo, a life or death decision regarding the convicted and the unborn should be left to the state legislatures...which is probably one of the better decisions the SCOTUS has made recently.
Maybe the States should tell me when I can wipe my *ss too?
Roe v Wade is an Individual Liberty issue.
The whole State isn't pregnant.
Maybe the States should tell me when I can wipe my *ss too?
Which bathroom should you be using when you do it? The men's or the women's?
See, the fact that leftists even MADE that an issue is why the States now have to legislate on the subject. Leftists couldn't just be normal and do normal things like use the correct bathroom and not slaughter tiny humans en masse.
Instead, they started screaming that their unhinged abnormality is a civil right. Which. it. is. NOT.
"why the States now have to legislate on the subject."
No state had to legislate on the subject, but Fascists like you want everything including ass-wiping regulated. Gender neutral restrooms have been around for decades and nobody ever complained until the Fascists decided to weaponized the issue.
Gender neutral restrooms have been around for decades
We're not talking about those. We're talking about gender exclusive restrooms. And locker rooms. And dressing rooms. And spas. And sports. And so on and so on. Heck, even jail cells. Which you sicko perverts want to invade, apparently for no reason other than to rape women of their privacy, agency, and bodily integrity.
You'll notice that it's never an issue of women pretending to be men wanting to go into a men's room. It's always - always - men pretending to be women, to invade the spaces in which they're the most vulnerable. What IS that, you sicko pervert freak? And why would you EVER defend such a thing?
Do you think every woman's vagina is a public restroom?
Of course you do; That's why it's property of the State.
You're the one who brought up wiping your butt, not me.
Oh, for fuck's sake! This is some seriously hyperbolic sophistry. Barring mail-order abortion pills does not "eliminate access to abortion pills in all 50 states." States that permit them will still be able to access them, just not through the mail.
"States that permit them will still be able to access them, just not through the mail."
Liar. It would also restrict FedEx, UPS, Amazon, and every mail order pharmacy.
At least be honest with your extremism.
Again, why putting mifepristone on the Schedule I of the CSA makes the most sense.
Sure, banning mail-order delivery of the abortion pill would ban all forms of "mail" delivery of those pills. Still, that does not, however, in any way, equate to "[eliminating] access to abortion pills in all 50 states" as the author so hyperbolically claimed. The other states (where it is allowed) will still have access through brick-and-mortar pharmacies. Asserting otherwise is what is deceitful.