September Updates
=================
###SCOTUS poised to take up mifepristone case this fall
Following the 5th Circuit ruling on mifepristone, the case is expected to make it to the Supreme Court as early as October of this year. Their verdict may have several hefty consequences, including challenges to FDA drug approvals across the board. While the latest 5th Circuit opinion did not fully revoke access to the drug, it affirmed that there should be extensive limits on how patients can get it.
From the *NYT*: ***"[T]he appeals court's decision essentially turned back the clock...to before the [FDA] began making a series of regulatory changes in 2016 that significantly broadened access to the pill...Those regulations required mifepristone to be prescribed and dispensed only by a doctor and picked up in person by the patient, who would have to visit the doctor three times during the medication abortion process." ***
Ultimately, right-wing groups and conservative organizations will seek to create more barriers to this form of abortion, the most commonly prescribed medication for the procedure.
###Bans challenged by the Center for Reproductive Rights
On Tuesday, the Center for Reproductive Rights announced that it will seek cases in three states - Idaho, Tennessee, and Oklahoma - to challenge the current abortion laws and the impacts on patients and physicians.
The organization is behind the Zurawski v. State of Texas, which resulted in an injunction by a district judge,**though the State immediately appealed it. **
**Per the CRR:*****"[Tuesday], the Center...[filed] complaints in three states...on behalf of women denied or delayed in receiving medically necessary abortion care despite facing severe and dangerous pregnancy complications. With these actions, the Center seeks to ensure that pregnant people in such dire situations can access abortion care in these states, and that doctors are given clarity on what situations qualify under the “medical emergency” exceptions in their states’ abortion bans." ***
###Finally - *some good news*!
After a court ruling on the 1849 law in Wisconsin found that it did not apply to modern-day abortion procedures or reproductive healthcare, Planned Parenthood announced that it would resume abortion-related care in the state**(!!!) Wisconsin has been in legal limbo following the Dobbs decision last year. **
Per *CBS*: ***"Dane County Circuit Judge Diane Schlipper ruled in June that Wisconsin's 173-year-old abortion ban outlaws killing fetuses but doesn't apply to consensual medical abortions...the legal language in the 1849 law doesn't use the term "abortion" so it only prohibits attacking a woman in an attempt to kill her unborn child."***
[**John, help us take the facts of the nuanced nature of reproductive health and justice across the nation by chipping in today.**]([link removed])
If you’ve saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation will go through immediately:
[ Chip in $24]([link removed])
[ Chip in $50]([link removed])
[ Chip in $75]([link removed])
[ Chip in $124]([link removed])
[ RUSH $250 !]([link removed])
[ Other Amount]([link removed])
Thank you,
**Anna Scudder**
**Reproductive Health & Justice Correspondent**
**No Dem Left Behind**
The Roe Report
--------------
No Dem Left Behind PAC
80M St. SE Suite 100
Washington D.C. 20003
Paid for by No Dem Left Behind PAC.
Not authorized by any federal candidate or candidate's committee.
[View in browser]([link removed]) | [Unsubscribe]([link removed] "Unsubscribe")