The Volokh Conspiracy
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Who Can Sue the Food and Drug Administration?
If doctors cannot sue the FDA for failing to restrict pharmaceuticals or other products, can anyone else? And if not, is this a problem?
If doctors who believe the Food & Drug Administration mistakenly approved or deregulated a drug cannot sue the FDA, can anyone else? This was the very first question asked at oral argument in FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine last week. Though initially raised by Justice Thomas, other justices picked up on the question, and it remains an interesting question. If AHM lacks standing here (as I have argued), can anyone sue the FDA? Maybe. Maybe not (at least at the moment). And if not, that might be okay.
It is quite common in standing cases for a judge or justice to ask "if not this plaintiff, then who would have standing?" While it is often the case that a different plaintiff, who is differently situated or has a more concrete stake in the underlying question may be more likely to have standing, that is not always the case. In some cases, no one has standing, at least not under current law. Not every governmental wrong may be remedied in federal court. As Justice Alito wrote for the Court in Clapper v. Amnesty International (quoting prior decisions of the Court going back fifty years), "the assumption that if respondents have no standing to sue, no one would have standing, is not a reason to find standing." In a standing case, the question is always whether the plaintiffs have standing, as this is what Article III (as currently interpreted) requires, not whether there is a hypothetical plaintiff that might have standing.
As a general matter, it is always more difficult to demonstrate standing when a plaintiff is seeking to influence how the government treats a third party than when a plaintiff is seeking to vindicate his or her own rights as against the government. So, for instance, a taxpayer may be able to sue if she believes the government unlawfully denied her a tax break, but is unlikely to have standing to challenge a governmental decision granting an illegal tax break to someone else.
In the regulatory context, it is always easier for a regulated firm to challenge how it is regulated than it is for third parties to challenge regulatory decisions. So a regulated firm has standing to challenge an Environmental Protection Agency regulation restricting that firm's activities, but an individual who wants to see more stringent regulation may or many not have standing to sue the EPA for failing to regulate that firm more aggressively. In some cases (environmental law in particular), Congress has created citizen suit provisions to address this asymmetry and make it easier for the beneficiaries of government regulation to meet the requirements of standing, and the Supreme Court has recognized that such provisions can make it easier to satisfy some of Article III's requirements. Congress has also enacted qui tam laws that facilitate suits by whistleblowers or others who discover government malfeasance or misfeasance, and these statutory provisions have enabled plaintiffs to clear the standing hurdle. Congress has not enacted such a provision that applies to FDA drug approval, however.
Even though Congress has never enacted an FDA-specific cause-of-action to make it easier for non-regulated parties to sue the FDA, that does not mean groups haven't tried. AHM is not the first ideological-oriented organization that sought to challenge the FDA's product-approval or regulatory decisions in court, and it is not the first such plaintiff to confront a serious standing hurdle. Courts have turned away several such suits, including cases filed by activist groups seeking to challenge FDA approval of vaccines (and not just for COVID-19), dental groups seeking greater regulation of mercury in dental amalgam, and suits by environmental organizations seeking greater regulation of hair-straightening products. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit also turned away a suit filed by a medical group challenging the FDA's revocation of an emergency use authorization for hydroxychloroquine, concluding it could not meet the test for associational standing.
While most activist suits challenging FDA policies have foundered on standing grounds, one that succeeded (at least in a district court) involved an effort by various medical organizations to force greater regulation of vaping products. In American Association of Pediatrics v. FDA, 379 F.Supp.3d 461 (D. Md. 2019), a district court in Maryland accepted claims of associational standing that mirror those asserted by AHM. According to the plaintiffs, if the FDA did not force vaping product manufacturers to submit their product marketing applications more rapidly, the plaintiff organizations would have more difficulty pursuing their public health mission because they would not have access to the information generated by the application review process. The district court bought this argument based upon an aggressive reading of Havens Realty, and the FDA ultimately acquiesced (leading to a crush of vaping product applications that the agency had no ability to properly review on a timely basis, arguably contributing to the FDA's vaping problem). As readers might expect, I think this decision had some of the same problems as did the lower court opinions in the AHM litigation (perhaps more, as the AAP case also implicated the FDA's enforcement discretion). [Note: Another activist group filed suit against the FDA for failing to ban menthol cigarettes this week, and standing should be an issue here too.]
There are also cases in which competitors have been able to assert standing to sue the FDA. As Michael Dorf notes in this post, there are cases in which the maker of a brand-name pharmaceutical challenged the approval of a generic, but this avenue will not always be available.
Another possibility that Dorf suggests might result from an FDA drug approval decision that will increase the costs for health care providers, there might be an argument for standing. Of note, this was the theory upon which several blue states sued the FDA arguing that it had not done enough to reregulate mifepristone (a suit, as I noted here, clearly intended to create a conflict in case AHM's claims succeeded). Specifically the states argued that the FDA's failure to make mifepristone more widely available increased the costs borne by state Medicaid programs, both because there are costs to comply with the FDA's restrictions and because restrictions on mifepristone result in more surgical abortions. I was skeptical of these arguments here, but it does indicate the sort of standing theory that might work. So, for instance, insofar as health insurers are required to provide cost-free coverage of certain classes of FDA-approved medications, an insurer might be able to assert standing when a new such drug is approved and that approval will increase the insurers' costs.
It is certainly true that it is difficult for those who are not regulated by the FDA to sue the agency for its regulatory and drug-approval decisions, but this is not mean those who are harmed by FDA drug-approval decisions have no means of redress. The FDA regularly reconsiders drug-approval decisions when new information reveals risks or problems about which the agency had been aware. More importantly, when the FDA approves a medication, this does not immunize the manufacturer against tort liability, as cases such as Wyeth v. Levine make clear. As FDA drug approval decisions are largely based upon the manufacturer's submissions, such liability may actually more to protect the public than would making it easier to sue the agency.
Regular readers know that I am hardly an FDA apologist. The agency has made mistakes and bad policy decisions, and likely will again. And, like any agency, the FDA's decisions should be subject to hard-look review when a party with Article III standing brings a suit in court. It may be difficult for non-regulated entities and individuals to bring such claims, but that does not mean plaintiffs such as AHM should get special treatment by the courts. Rather, if it is too difficult for associations and others to sue the FDA, it is up to Congress to create causes of action that facilitate standing as it has done in other areas. But unless and until Congress takes such a step, plaintiffs such as AHM should be told they lack standing to bring these sorts of claims in federal court.
* * *
For those interested, here are my prior blog posts about the AHM mifepristone litigation and the issues it raises:
- "The Next Abortion Battlegrounds," June 22, 2022;
- "Assessing the Legal Claims in Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA," March 8, 2023;
- "AHM v. FDA: A Contrary View and a Rejoinder," March 28, 2023;
- "Blue-State AGs Have A Mifepristone Lawsuit of Their Own," March 29, 2023;
- "Two (Wrong) Mifepristone Court Rulings in One Day," April 8, 2023;
- "The Good and Bad of the Fifth Circuit's Abortion Pill Ruling," April 13, 2023.
- "BREAKING: Supreme Court to Consider Fifth Circuit's Abortion Pill Decision," Dec. 13, 2023.
- Supreme Court Denies Red State Effort to Intervene in Mifepristone Case, Feb. 20, 2024.
- Can Emergency Room Doctors Sue the FDA for Failing to Regulate Mifepristone More Aggressively?, Mar. 26, 2024.
- Mifepristone in the Supreme Court—Comments on Oral Argument (Updated), March 26, 2024
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Which doctors?
Mainstream doctors?
Fringe doctors?
The best doctors?
Superstitious doctors?
A single doctor?
A mainstream association of doctors?
Doctors who prefer science and reason to superstition and dogma?
Nice of you to leave off the money quote.
You're just fine with an unaccountable government, aren't you?
"You’re just fine with an unaccountable government, aren’t you?"
The question is how it should be accountable. That we have certain rights we don't want the government to have the power to infringe doesn't mean we don't want the government to have power at all, because a government with no power is no government at all.
Consider the government saying 'everyone will attend Catholic Mass on Easter Sunday'. People who want to assert that that violates one of their reserved rights - the 1A - have standing to sue. But what if our elected representatives enact a law that 'the speed limit on Main Street is 35 mph'. People who disagree can of course participate in the debate when that law is enacted, and afterwards they can vote the bums out and repeal the law. Or someone who feels one of their reserved rights is infringed ('my holy book says 'thou shalt always proceed with the greatest celerity') can sue.
But are the courts the right place to go if your objection is just 'this is a dumb law that makes my commute longer' or 'this is a dumb law that lets speed demons endanger my children'? What if both camps win their respective suits and one judge orders the limit be raised, while the other orders them lowered? Maybe the courts aren't the place for general policy arguments?
I don't think that arguing that the way to make the government accountable is sometimes elections rather than the courts is arguing for an unaccountable government.
Anyone who thinks election actually hold anyone accountable in any meaningful sense has little concern for what the word actually means. All elections do is provide long-term guidance of an incredibly rudimentary sense. It's the equivalent of legislating longer prison sentences for future crimes instead of prosecuting past crimes.
It's not even long term guidance.
We have 90%+ incumbency for an institution that ignores public opinion 90% of then time and has a chronic single digit approval rating.
Now that we have open cheating and fraud, elections are even more ceremonial than the DC Republican opposition to Democrat/Marxist tyranny.
Wow, what utter fools our Founders were setting up a republic!
Weird how much such a shitty system has caught on worldwide.
You're pretty good at reading what wasn't written and not addressing what was written.
But you're lousy at sarcasm.
Exactly. Having nine people with three year degrees in reading casebooks and a lifetime position with no oversight be the ultimate authority for accountability is actually a much better system.
RE: "my holy book says ‘thou shalt always proceed with the greatest celery"
This one, no doubt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J88udtXLStw&t=52s
The normal way governments are held "accountable" is through elections, where the entire public gets a say, not through individual randos filing lawsuits just because they would prefer a different public policy.
How do you hold account independent agencies or agencies who collude with activist groups to sue and settle to get unpopular policies implemented with elections?
The same way you hold any other government agencies accountable: you elect people to pass laws.
1/ no one is harmed by the FDA's failure to enforce a law, at least i cant see it. Dont like the pill? Dont take the pill.
2/ we have these people called representatives, who can change the law.
Dont like the pill? Dont take the pill.
That sounds like a sensible description of how medicine works. Makes you wonder why people go to doctors in the first place.
Makes you wonder why people go to doctors in the first place.
Three components here.
First, is the knowlede of what drug to take. While many people may be able to “self-prescribe” fairly direct medications, for many things there’s a whole lot outside the layperson’s knowledge-sphere, and that’s where a doctor’s advice is great.
Second, is the legal acquisition of the drug you want (whether self-prescribed or prescribed by a doctor). Thanks to the Durham-Humphry Act of 1951, many drugs are only legally available with a doctor’s prescription, making it a necessary (rather then merely recommended) step to getting those drugs.
And third, is the procurement of funds for the drug. Without that doctor’s prescription, insurance won’t cover it, and many drugs jump from being affordable to being exorbitantly expensive.
But ultimately, that’s about access. Assuming you have already secured access to a drug, you do still have the legal right to refuse to take it. Medicating someone against their will is actually very difficult to do these days.
Who has standing to challenge the IRS notice 2020-75 for the deductibility of state income tax in excess of the $10,000. A notice allowing the deduction for state income tax specifically designed to circumvent the prohibition of individual income tax in excess of the $10,000 cap.
typo in last line - should read
"... prohibition of the deduction for state income tax in excess of the $10,000 cap."
This is the kind of State Action liberals love.
It's just too important for politicians and voters, so it's up to our enlightened and noble Bureaucrats to govern us fairly and with equity.
Professor Adler,
You asked for a specific example. Here’s a specific example.
Consider the case of GenBioPro v. Sorsaia. In that case GenBioPro, a manufacturer of mifepristone, sued West Virginia’s Attorney General, claiming that the FDA rules on mifepristone, the very ones at issue in the AHM v. FDA case, pre-empted West Virginia’s abortion laws and prohibited West Virginia from restricting mifepristone.
West Virginia chose a cautious defense strategy, arguing simply that its laws were not pre-empted. The district judge mostly agreed with West Virginia, holding that based on precedent that federal regulatory schemes for horse slaughter for meat, uranium mining, etc. did not pre-empt state bans on these practices, the FDA approval of mifepristone does not generally pre-empt West Virgins bans on it as part of state abortion law. But the court gave GenBioPro a small win, holding that the FDA rules permitting teleprescription preempt a West Virginia law requiring an in-person visit before prescribing an abortifacient, and striking down that portion of the law.
It would have been totally open to West Virginia to adopt a more aggressive defense posture and argue that to the extent the FDA rules conflict with West Virginia law, it is the FDA rules that have to go. There can be no question that a state has a sovereign interest in enforcing its laws and sovereign standing to contest federal legislation purportedly pre-empting them.
The existence of a decision saying that the FDA rules relaxing prescription pre-empt stricter state rules entitles any state attorney general in a state with a similar rule who cares to, to sue the United States claiming that the FDA rule is invalid because invalidly adopted, in conflict with the Comstock Act, or any legal theory the state wants to bring. Moreover, it is open to opponents of abortion to file amicus curiae briefs etc. in any case where there is a claim that federal law or a regulation pre-empts state abortion restrictions, and argue that the purportedly preempting federal law or regulation is invalid, ultra vires, unconstitutional, etc.
You asked for an example. Here it is.
By that logic any state government would have standing to sue over any federal policy by simply passing a law that seeks to contradict that policy.
Perhaps that should be the case... but it would be a pretty drastic expansion of standing.
Of course federal law should trump state law on prohibition!
Wait, are we talking morning after pills or marijuana? I need to know before I support or tear into that important, grand philosophical principle.
The question is should there be a penalty for using the court as a weapon to impose a plantiff's ideology upon the rest of the country? For instance, should Orthodox Jews, or Muslims, be allowed to sue FDA for allowing pork to be sold as food? Or should they pay some penalty for wasting the court's time with such a lawsuit?
(When I visited USSR, in the mid-1980s, I got into an argument (a friendly one) with a Russian student of government, who told me "our system, in which there is only one party, is better than yours, in which two parties undermine each other." I asked, "OK, but in your system, when there's a dispute about policy, how does it get resolved?" He hesitated, and then answered, reluctantly: "The two parties usually sue each other in court.")
“OK, but in your system, when there’s a dispute about policy, how does it get resolved?”
With a bullet or a helicopter crash.
I think as far as standing is concerned, states should be able to argue that preemption is an injury. East Virginia law requires codeine to be labeled with a skull and crossbones saying "this will kill you". The FDA requires a different label. East Virginia has been injured and a remedy is available. The courts can decide whether the FDA's label requirement is consistent with the Administrative Proceudure Act and whether the grant of power to the FDA is consistent with constitutional law under the circumstances. Under current administrative and constitutional law, East Virginia loses on the merits.
If they ban Mifepristone, and the Mifepristone-followed-by-misoprostol regimen becomes illegal and unavailable, we’ll just use methotrexate (followed by misoprostol). Problem solved!
In fact, pretty much any general chemotherapeutic (by “general chemotherapeutic”, I mean, any chemotherapeutic which works by interfering with cell-reproduction generally, as methotrexate does, rather than by a tissue-specific mechanism, as Mifepristone does) can be used in low dosages as an abortifacient.
Biochemistry is pro-choice.
(In fact, it’s a bit of a mystery why the world is so obsessed with Mifepristone. There are so many reasonable alternative abortifacients one could use!)
Good luck trying to ban methotrexate, which has, for decades, been one of the first lines of defense against cancer, and against autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, Crohn’s disease, and even ectopic pregnancy.
(And good luck trying to ban misoprostol, which is used already in many ways, including preventing ulcers, and inducing childbirth.)
Better question.
Who can defund the FDA?
Congress.
If the FDA fails to regulate something*, why should anyone have standing to sue? Not taking a pill is the default condition.
If the FDA lowers/decreases/makes it easier to access something, again, why should anyone have standing to sue?
Now if the FDA “over” regulates something, imposes costs, or stifles competition, I see standing.
*Even if the FDA fails to regulate something which they are required to regulate (say, nicotine), who cares**? This to me falls into something analogous to executive/prosecutorial discretion. We cant force the govt to enforce laws (see for example: pot, or the border).
**Who cares, meaning who is harmed. Dont want to take a pill because of uncertain side effects? Dont.
This, dwb68.
I am hardly concerned that people may have trouble suing an agency for not regulating something. If you want the government to do more, that's a great place to win at the ballot box. If the government is over-regulating (or unfairly regulating), then that's a time it may be necessary to vindicate your individual rights in court. But making an agency stop other people taking a pill seems exactly the big government action many of the usual suspects around here ordinarily would be upset about.
In other words, suing to prevent the government restricting your choice of medications vindicates (or attempts to vindicate) asserted individual rights. Suing to make the government restrict other people's choices is attempting to impose one's policy preferences on others via the courts.
There may be gray areas where controlling statutes clearly prohibit a particular product, but usually, as in the mifepristone case, the issue is really trying to obtain a policy victory rather than rectify an individualized injury.
I reject the premise that it can ever be okay for no one to possibly have standing. When governmental wrongs can not be remedied in courts, citizens will eventually be forced to find other, potentially violent remedies. The Rule of Law is supposed to prevent that. Do not let academic theories about standing create situations that diminish the Rule of Law.
"When governmental wrongs can not be remedied in courts, citizens will eventually be forced to find other, potentially violent remedies."
Why aren't elections one of those non-violent options? The city council sets the speed limit at 35. You think 30 (or 40) would be better. The courts decline to overrule the city council for whatever reason. What's the matter about a petition drive, picketing, or electing new council members?
This is the question they don't answer. Above, someone was deriding elections as pointless. FFS.
Because Rossami is concerned they can't build popular support for their positions. So that means it's either impose their views via the judiciary, or at gunpoint.
If nobody is harmed, what's the "wrong"?
[...] but this is not mean those who are harmed by FDA drug-approval decisions have no means of redress. The FDA regularly reconsiders drug-approval decisions when new information reveals risks or problems about which the agency had been aware.
Kinda buried the lede, no?
The entire reason this doctor group has a standing problem is that they haven't been harmed by the FDA's decision, and are relying on a theory of association-with-sin that includes multiple degrees of separation. Further, the "new information" they tried to introduce is all quack science, and the actual science says the exact opposite.
Which is to say... if medication abortions were as dangerous as these doctors claim, then we'd (A) have the evidence, and (B) have the victims, so (C) We'd have the plaintiff's without a standing problem.