Outcome of Idaho, Kansas, Missouri lawsuit against FDA on mifepristone by end of 2025
States win, FDA regulations changed • 25%
States win, FDA regulations unchanged • 25%
States lose, FDA regulations unchanged • 25%
Settled out of court • 25%
Court ruling or official legal documents
Texas Judge Allows Idaho, Kansas, Missouri to Challenge FDA's Mifepristone Rules, Seeking 7-Week Limit and In-Person Visits
Jan 17, 2025, 02:00 AM
A federal judge in Texas, Matthew Kacsmaryk, has ruled that three Republican-led states—Idaho, Kansas, and Missouri—can proceed with their lawsuit aimed at restricting access to the abortion pill mifepristone nationwide. The states are challenging the federal Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) rules that allow telehealth prescriptions for mifepristone and permit its use up to 10 weeks of pregnancy. They seek to limit its use to the first seven weeks and require three in-person doctor visits to obtain the drug. The lawsuit follows a U.S. Supreme Court decision that found previous challengers lacked standing to sue, but Kacsmaryk's ruling allows these states to continue their legal efforts, arguing that the current FDA regulations undermine state abortion laws and hinder law enforcement efforts.
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Supreme Court • 25%
Circuit Court • 25%
District Court • 25%
Settlement Reached • 25%
Idaho • 33%
Kansas • 33%
Missouri • 33%
None • 1%
No action taken • 25%
Amendment passed • 25%
Amendment failed • 25%
Amendment delayed • 25%
Amendment partially struck down • 25%
No decision by end of 2025 • 25%
Amendment upheld • 25%
Amendment fully struck down • 25%
Fully restricted • 25%
Unrestricted as per Amendment 3 • 25%
In legal limbo • 25%
Partially restricted • 25%
Case dismissed • 25%
Settlement reached • 25%
Texas wins • 25%
Doctor wins • 25%
Missouri • 25%
Florida • 25%
Other • 25%
Texas • 25%
Passes in legislature • 25%
Not introduced • 25%
Passes via voter referendum • 25%
Fails in legislature • 25%
Issue federal guidance • 25%
No action • 25%
Challenge state laws • 25%
Introduce new federal law • 25%
Other • 25%
Passed but blocked • 25%
Passed and enacted • 25%
Not passed • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Idaho • 25%
None of the above • 25%
Missouri • 25%
Kansas • 25%