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DOJ asks appeals court to pause judge's 'extraordinary and unprecedented' ruling on abortion drug mifepristone

The Justice Department asked a federal appeals court Monday to halt a judge's ruling last week that would suspend access nationwide to the abortion drug mifepristone.

The Department of Justice filed an emergency motion with a federal appeals court Monday seeking to halt a judge's ruling last week that would suspend access nationwide to the abortion drug mifepristone. 

U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, a Trump appointee, ordered a pause Friday to the FDA's approval of mifepristone, which is used with the drug misoprostol to end a pregnancy within the first 70 days. Kacsmaryk gave the federal government seven days to seek emergency relief from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. 

Lawyers for the Justice Department called that ruling "extraordinary and unprecedented" in their appeal on Monday. 

"Plaintiffs lack standing to challenge FDA’s approval of a drug they neither take nor prescribe; their challenge to FDA actions dating back to 2000 is manifestly untimely; and they have provided no basis for second-guessing FDA’s scientific judgment," the attorneys wrote. "If allowed to take effect, that order will irreparably harm patients, healthcare systems, and businesses."

Attorneys asked the appeals court to stay Kacsmaryk's ruling while the issue makes its way through the courts. It is likely to end up at the Supreme Court, which overturned Roe V. Wade and returned abortion restrictions to the states last year. 

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Separately, Obama-appointed U.S. District Judge Thomas Rice issued a preliminary injunction on Friday barring the FDA from "altering" the current availability of mifepristone in several Democratic-led states. Attorneys general for those states had sued the health agency earlier this year, arguing that mifepristone is "safer than many other common drugs FDA regulates, such as Viagra and Tylenol."

The Biden administration swiftly condemned Kacsmaryk's ruling, with Health Secretary Xavier Becerra suggesting that the FDA could ignore Kacsmaryk's ruling altogether. 

A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services walked that statement back on Sunday. 

"People are rightly frustrated about this decision — but as dangerous a precedent it sets for a court to disregard FDA’s expert judgment regarding a drug’s safety and efficacy, it would also set a dangerous precedent for the Administration to disregard a binding decision," Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson Kamara Jones tweeted Sunday. 

More than 300 biotech and pharmaceutical industry executives signed on to an open letter on Monday calling for a reversal of Kacsmaryk's ruling. 

"We call for the reversal of this decision to disregard science, and the appropriate restitution of the mandate for the safety and efficacy of medicines for all with the FDA, the agency entrusted to do so in the first place," the executives wrote. 

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