When the Supreme Court issued its order on Thursday, the press didn’t report on a legal procedure. They reported on a political fantasy.
Across the front pages – from national outlets to the Alabama Political Reporter – the verdict was unanimous: The court had “preserved” access to the abortion pill mifepristone. It was a clean, comforting narrative for a polarized public. It was also a legal fabrication.
The Supreme Court didn’t “preserve” anything. In Louisiana v. FDA, the justices didn’t vote to protect a drug or endorse the FDA’s regulatory record. They issued an emergency stay to maintain the status quo while litigation continues in the lower courts. This wasn’t a victory for reproductive rights or a defeat for the states. It was a procedural necessity to prevent a single lower court from upending national pharmaceutical rules before the merits of the case could be fully argued.
The headlines suggest a moral referendum, but the 7-2 order was unsigned and lacked a majority opinion for a reason: It was a technical intervention. By staying the Fifth Circuit’s injunction, the court signaled that a nationwide rollback of FDA rules is a bridge too far for the “emergency docket” when the jurisdictional foundation is still being litigated.
Here is the truth the headlines missed: This case is not about abortion. It is about federal authority and jurisdictional discipline. It could have been about a regulatory challenge to a hair-loss medication or a new asthma inhaler.
Imagine a scenario where a group of states sued to ban a specific hair-loss drug because they disliked the FDA’s dispensing rules. If those states claimed they were “harmed” simply because they might have to pay for an occasional emergency room visit related to that drug, the court would have hit the same “pause” button. The law doesn’t care about the drug; it cares about the “case or controversy” requirement of Article III. The court’s role is not to bless a medication, but to ensure that the parties in the room actually have a legal right to be there.
The media’s insistence on using the word “preserved” is a form of linguistic malpractice. It implies the justices affirmatively vetted the medication, reviewed the science, and gave it a judicial stamp of approval. None of that happened. An emergency stay is a temporary freeze, not a blessing. It is the judicial equivalent of a “time-out” called by a referee while they check the replay.
When a judge pauses an eviction while an appeal is heard, no one says the judge “preserved” the tenant’s right to live there indefinitely. They only said the status quo remains until the law is settled. Why can’t the press apply that same basic logic to the highest court in the land?
The answer is as cynical as it is dangerous. The press has become addicted to the myth of the “Super-Legislature” – the idea that the Supreme Court is just a third chamber of Congress where nine people in robes grant or revoke rights at will. If they report the truth – that the court is a limited institution issuing temporary procedural orders based on standing and administrative law – the drama disappears. The clicks dry up.
But when we treat jurisdictional pauses as moral referendums, we break the public’s understanding of how our government works. We teach citizens that the court is a political tool rather than a neutral arbiter of constitutionality. We encourage a cycle where every procedural stay is met with either unearned celebration or misplaced outrage.
In Louisiana v. FDA, the state argued that its Medicaid budget was harmed by the cost of emergency care for patients using mail-order mifepristone. The FDA countered that this injury is far too “attenuated” to establish standing. This is a vital legal debate that will likely return to the Supreme Court on the merits. But last Thursday was not that day.
The Supreme Court didn’t save a drug on Thursday. It followed a standard appellate procedure to keep the national regulatory gears turning while the legal system does its job. The media’s reportage is a fairy tale that trades constitutional accuracy for political clickbait. It’s time we demanded the truth: The court did its job. The press didn’t.
