What comes next after the Supreme Court blocked – for now – restrictions on abortion pills

The abortion rights community and its allies in the Biden administration secured a striking victory from the conservative Supreme Court with an order Friday night that stopped restrictions on medication abortion drugs from taking effect.

The Supreme Court’s brief, unsigned order came in an emergency dispute over lower court rulings that would have curtailed access to the drug, mifepristone. At the request of the Justice Department and a mifepristone manufacter, the high court placed a hold – known as a stay – on the lower court rulings while the appeals process plays out.

Only Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito publicly indicated their dissent from the Supreme Court’s move.

What did the Supreme Court do on Friday?

The Supreme Court handed a win to the defenders of the medication abortion drugs by pausing lower court rulings that would have disrupted access to the drug as a result from a lawsuit from anti-abortion doctors seeking to wipe away the US Food and Drug Administration’s two-decade old approval of mifepristone.

That means FDA’s current regulatory scheme around the drug remains in place, ensuring that access to medication abortion – in the states where it is legal – is maintained at least for the next couple weeks, and likely longer.

How did we get here?

Friday’s order is the latest dramatic twist in the lawsuit that was filed in November. The legal volleying ramped up two weeks ago, when US District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, an appointee of former President Donald Trump – issued a ruling that would have a halted the FDA’s 2000 approval of the drug.

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