BREAKING: Supreme Court to Consider Fifth Circuit's Abortion Pill Decision
The Court granted two petitions for certiorari seeking review of a controversial lower court decision limiting federal approval of mifepristone.
The Court granted two petitions for certiorari seeking review of a controversial lower court decision limiting federal approval of mifepristone.
The FDA is unnecessarily making your life more difficult.
Plus: Does Tom Cruise really do all of his own stunts?
The FDA decision is only a mini step toward freeing the pill.
The right and the left are pushing pro-natalist polices that have never worked and are deeply misguided.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about the limits of population control with Elizabeth Nolan Brown and Scott Winship.
Why won’t the FDA allow women to buy a safer product without requiring a doctor’s visit that medical experts think is unnecessary?
Despite experts recommending that birth control be sold over the counter, the U.S. still treats the pill like it's 1960.
Plus: Supreme Court approval drops drastically, truckers protest California gig-work law, and more...
The FDA, and the Dalkon Shield scandal, deserve some of the blame.
If approved, the drug could increase access to effective birth control.
A pro-life group's model legislation hints at how extreme enforcing abortion bans could get.
The last 50 years have been marked by a remarkably stable social consensus balancing the rights of women and fetuses. Let's not throw that away.
Does returning decisions about abortion to the states increase liberty or shrink it?
The Pharmacy Access Act is good policy stuck in legislative limbo.
For decades, Western apologists downplayed the horrific consequences of China’s reproductive restrictions..
Plus: Clarity on Adam Toledo's death, Big Tech antitrust bill approved by House Democrats, and more...
The presumptive Democratic vice presidential nominee offers a highly circumscribed notion of the role of faith in public life.
Plus: Biden echoes Trump on trade, tech ties to cops revealed, and more...
The Obamacare contraception mandate continues to cause legal trouble.
"Adherence to guidelines among telecontraception vendors may be higher than it is among clinics that provide in-person visits," the authors write.
Plus: an Arizona newspaper is beholden to prosecutors, and what does "economic freedom" mean to socialists?
A conversation between Reason editors about Georgia's "heartbeat law," the future of Roe v. Wade, and how to be less shouty even when you disagree.
A Southern officeholder gains little from pushing for a right to post-delivery abortion.
It would fast-track FDA review of applications to free the pill from prescriptions and let people use health savings accounts for non-Rx drugs.
Plus: Russian "spy" Maria Butina, Baton Rouge cops in blackface, good news for California sex workers, and a new FDA crackdown.
In 2019, it's liberals, not conservatives, who are holding the pill hostage for political gain.
Plus: Libertarians face resistance while picking up trash without a permit, and Trump imagines Sen. Warren at the Wounded Knee massacre.
The Obamacare contraception mandate is getting a Trump-era overhaul.
Falling fertility means that folks now have increasing power to choose the number of children that they wish to have.
Clinton runs with a Kamala Harris whopper that's already been debunked.
Harris and other Democrats distorted Kavanaugh's comments on birth control to portray him as a religious extremist.
Birth control should be available over the counter.
Defenders of Obamacare's contraceptive mandate give short shrift to religious liberty.
Reason's Nick Gillespie, Katherine Mangu-Ward, and Matt Welch on why government-mandated birth control and the NRA both suck.
Department of Health and Human Services officials claim the rule will not change coverage for "99.9 percent of women."
A rule is under review that would (reportedly) relax the hotly debated requirement.
This is why you shouldn't trust a man who has no principles of his own to do right by yours.
The lethal consequences of a common, obscure hospital licensing law
Today's religious freedom controversies got their start in the 19th century debate over outlawing polygamy.
Laws that force individuals into unwanted business relationships are unjust.
Why the contraception but not the meatball sub?