The U.S. Supreme Court will not hear Oklahoma’s appeal seeking to reinstate a law restricting medical abortions, it announced Monday, reversing course.
Separately, the Texas abortion clinics threatened by the state’s new admitting privileges requirement have asked the Supreme Court to step in and block that law, which the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Thursday could immediately go into effect. About a third of Texas’s abortion clinics have already had to stop providing abortions because they are unable to comply with the law. Their fates are now in the hands of Justice Antonin Scalia, who oversees that circuit and who promptly asked the state of Texas to respond by November 12.
In the Oklahoma case, the U.S. Supreme Court had asked the State Supreme Court to explain why it had previously struck down the law, which would restrict the off-label use of the abortion pill, and whether it amounted to an unconstitutional ban. Abortion rights advocates, who would prefer to let the ruling stand than be brought up with an uncertain Supreme Court, cheered the dismissal of the case.
“This should send a strong message to politicians in Oklahoma and across the U.S. that women’s constitutional rights are not up for debate and cannot be legislated away,” said Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, which brought the initial challenge to the Oklahoma law.
The Oklahoma law banned the use of safer, off-label protocols for medication abortion and narrows the time window it is available. The law is admittedly confusing: Off-label use of drugs is highly common, and forcing doctors to adhere to an older protocol — which requires an additional office visit and has more side effects — has nothing to do with medicine and everything to do with politics. But the question was whether this amounted to a ban, or just a regulation. Under Supreme Court precedent, an outright ban of abortion before viability is outright unconstitutional, but regulations are allowed unless they constitute an “undue burden.” The Oklahoma Supreme Court responded, “H.B. 1970 effectively bans all medication abortions.” That was enough for the U.S. Supreme Court to drop it.
Meanwhile, in Texas, a similar medication abortion ban was ruled constitutional by both the federal district court (which added a health exception) and the appeals court (which removed it). While that provision is not part of the emergency request before the Supreme Court, it may eventually have to settle the question of whether states can pass such laws requiring the FDA protocol.









