The court's opinion -- which all nine justices joined -- found that the plaintiffs lacked Article III standing to press their claim that the FDA acted unlawfully when it approved, and then loosened, restrictions on the way the abortion drug may be prescribed. I usually feel that the Court uses (and misuses) standing doctrine to avoid deciding questions it would rather not decide. In this case, though, the plaintiffs' standing theories were pretty farfetched and the Court wasn't buying any of them.
The basic problem with this case was that the doctors couldn't point to any harm, injury, or hardship the FDA's approval imposed on them:
[T]he plaintiffs do not prescribe or use mifepristone. And FDA is not requiring them to do or refrain from doing anything. Rather, the plaintiffs want FDA to make mifepristone more difficult for other doctors to prescribe and for pregnant women to obtain. Under Article III of the Constitution, a plaintiff ’s desire to make a drug less available for others does not establish standing to sue. [emphasis in original]
On the merits (which the Court did not address), I think the FDA's handling of the demonstrably safe and effective mifepristone was unassailable, but a win is a win.
The next question is: If these plaintiffs don't have standing to challenge the FDA's actions, who does? The answer might well be noöne:
For starters, it is not clear that no one else would have standing to challenge FDA’s relaxed regulation of mifepristone. But even if no one would have standing, this Court has long rejected that kind of “if not us, who?” argument as a basis for standing. The “assumption” that if these plaintiffs lack “standing to sue, no one would have standing, is not a reason to find standing.” Rather, some issues may be left to the political and democratic processes: The Framers of the Constitution did not “set up something in the nature of an Athenian democracy or a New England town meeting to oversee the conduct of the National Government by means of lawsuits in federal courts.” [citations omitted]
That said, three states have intervened in this case, which is pending in federal district court in Amarillo. Why Amarillo? Because conservative plaintiffs know they have a judge there who will lend a sympathetic ear to their cause. See Texas Tribune, April 11, 2024.
As reported by Bloomberg News:
Missouri, Idaho, and Kansas have already intervened in the case before the district court, alleging their own unique harms. The states claim their residents are suffering serious medical complications that require emergency care after taking mifepristone that they’ve obtained through the mail and the states are having to pay for much of that care through Medicaid.
Stay tuned . . . .