Supreme Court says abortion pill mifepristone will remain broadly available during legal battle

US News

Demonstrators rally in support of abortion rights at the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC, April 15, 2023. 
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | AFP | Getty Images

The Supreme Court on Friday ordered the abortion pill mifepristone to remain broadly available as litigation plays out in a lower court.

The high court’s decision Friday came in response to an emergency request by the Justice Department to block lower court rulings that would severely limit access to the medication even in some states where abortion remains legal. 

The case will now be heard in the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. The appeals court has scheduled oral arguments for Wednesday, May 17 at 1 pm CT.

Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, both conservatives, opposed the court’s decision to keep mifepristone available without the restrictions imposed by federal judges.

Mifepristone has become the central flashpoint in the legal battle over abortion since the Supreme Court last summer overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that guaranteed abortion as a constitutional right nationwide. 

Mifepristone, used in combination with another drug called misoprostol, is the most common method to terminate a pregnancy in the U.S., accounting for about half of all abortions.

The national legal battle over mifepristone began with a lawsuit filed by a coalition of doctors who oppose abortion, the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine. Those doctors sought to force the Food and Drug Administration to pull the medication from the U.S. entirely.

Earlier this month, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk ruled in favor of the antiabortion doctors and issued a sweeping order that would have halted sales of mifepristone nationwide. 

Days later, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals blocked part of Kacsmaryk’s order and allowed the brand name version of the drug, Mifeprex, to remain on the market. But the appeals court judges imposed restrictions on the medication that would severely limit access.

The appeals court blocked mail delivery of the drug, imposed doctors’ visits as a condition to get the medication, and reduced the length of time when women can take the pill to the seventh week of pregnancy. 

The appeals court judges also suspended the 2019 approval of the generic version of mifepristone. The company that sells the generic version, GenBioPro, told the Supreme Court that the majority of the nation’s supply of the medication would “disappear overnight” if the appeals court ruling went into effect. 

GenBioPro says it supplies two-thirds of the mifepristone used in abortions in the U.S.

Danco Laboratories, the distributor of Mifeprex, told the high court that the restrictions would also take the brand name version of the medication off the market for months as the FDA adjusted the drug’s labelling to comply with the lower court orders.

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