menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Thomas, Alito Blast SCOTUS For Helping ‘Undermine’ Dobbs With Abortion Drug Ruling

7 0
14.05.2026

1 Trending: ‘We Are Going To Turn Off The Money’: Vance’s Anti-Fraud Taskforce To Make States Prove They Prosecute Fraud

2 Trending: John ‘Failure Is Not An Option’ Thune Just Failed Election Integrity

3 Trending: Abandon The Fragile Feminist Monoculture Making Men And Women Miserable

4 Trending: Nanny State Faces A Defeat In Its War On Food Freedom As PRIME Act Advances

Thomas, Alito Blast SCOTUS For Helping ‘Undermine’ Dobbs With Abortion Drug Ruling

‘Louisiana’s [pro-life] efforts have been thwarted by certain medical providers, private organizations, and States that abhor laws like Louisiana’s and seek to undermine their enforcement,’ wrote Justice Alito.

Share Article on Facebook

Share Article on Twitter

Share Article on Truth Social

Share Article via Email

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito had some choice words for their Supreme Court colleagues on Thursday over their “remarkable” decision “undermin[ing]” the court’s historic Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade.

The stinging rebukes came in an order the high court handed down to temporarily pause an appellate court ruling that halted a Biden-era FDA rule allowing the mailing of mifepristone to women without an in-person doctor visit. In agreeing to halt the policy, the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals found that the FDA’s “progressive relaxation of mifepristone’s guardrails likely lacked a basis in data and scientific literature,” and noted how the “FDA itself now concedes the regulations were marred by ‘procedural deficits’ and a ‘lack of adequate consideration.’”

While seven justices agreed to temporarily pause the 5th Circuit’s order while litigation in the case continues, Thomas and Alito authored brutal dissents underscoring the illogical nature of their colleagues’ decision.

Thomas said that he would deny the........

© The Federalist