NEWSFLASH: Supreme Court Dismisses Oklahoma Abortion Case

Without much explanation, the U.S. Supreme Court took a major abortion case off of its docket yesterday, providing relief for abortion rights supporters concerned about how the conservative court may have decided the case.

Cline v. Oklahoma Coalition for Reproductive Justice was a “plea by the state of Oklahoma to revive a law that restricts doctors’ use of drugs rather than surgery to perform an abortion with the medication RU-486 and others.” The law in question had been struck down by Oklahoma’s Supreme Court in 2011. The court agreed to hear the case in June but held off on reviewing it until some issues were clarified. Oklahoma’s highest court finally provided the necessary clarifications last week, explaining that the law would ban all medication abortions–even ones approved by the FDA.

Because of the large scope of the law, if the Supreme Court were to rule on Cline, it would have to examine whether an abortion procedure allowed by the federal government can be banned by a state. A decision in favor of Oklahoma’s right to enact such a restrictive law would open the door for other states to attempt similar techniques to chip away at abortion rights.

This victory may be short-lived, however. Texas recently enacted a similar law that restricts medication abortions, and a challenge to that law is also headed to the Supreme Court.

Photo of U.S. Supreme Court from Flickr user runJMrun under license from Creative Commons 2.0

Crossposted from Feminist News

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