The Mendocino Beacon

Newsom: State ‘done’ with Walgreens for buckling in abortion pill fight

- By John Woolfolk

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that California will stop doing business with Walgreens after the giant pharmacy chain said it won’t dispense abortion pills in 20 states where authoritie­s recently threatened legal action for doing so.

“California won’t be doing business with Walgreens — or any company that cowers to the extremists and puts women’s lives at risk,” Newsom said Monday on Twitter as abortion foes rallied in their third annual March for Life at the state capital. “We’re done.”

What the governor’s remark might mean for California­ns who rely on the Illinois-based national pharmacy chain was unclear. Newsom’s office could not answer whether residents who receive health care through state programs such as Medi-Cal or Covered California would be forced to go to other pharmacies to use their benefits.

“California is reviewing all relationsh­ips between Walgreens and the state,” said Brandon Richards, deputy communicat­ions director for Newsom. “We will not pursue business with companies that cave to right wing bullies pushing their extremist agenda or companies that put politics above the health of women and girls.”

James Scullary, spokespers­on for Covered California, which administer­s the Affordable Care Act plans in the state, said that “we are engaged with the governor’s office and working to determine the potential implicatio­ns of this announceme­nt.”

Jonathan Keller, president of California Family Council, one of the groups that was marching in Sacramento on Monday, said

the governor’s move would only hurt California residents.

“It’s really stunning that the governor of California would demand that corporatio­ns break the law in other states as a cost of doing business in California,” Keller said. “It’s a very ominous threat. Is he threatenin­g to withhold that choice from medical patients to fulfill their prescripti­ons? State employees can’t use Walgreens as their pharmacy of choice? He’s actually penalizing California residents.”

At issue is a drug called mifepristo­ne used to induce early term abortions. The Food and Drug Administra­tion first approved its use in 2000 through seven weeks of gestation, and that was extended in 2016 to 10 weeks. The agency says the drug is “safe when used as indicated” and was approved after “a thorough and comprehens­ive review of the scientific evidence.” The FDA said that there have been 28 reports of deaths in patients associated with mifepristo­ne since it was approved.

Such “medication abortions” outpaced surgical procedures for the first time in 2020 and now account for more than half of

all U.S. abortions, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

The FDA for much of the past two decades has restricted access to the pills outside of medical offices out of safety concerns but began easing those rules during the COVID-19 pandemic. Since the U.S. Supreme Court last year overturned the constituti­onal right to abortion in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, abortion rights advocates have looked to abortion pills as a means of maintainin­g easy access to the procedure.

In early January, the FDA further expanded rules to allow retail pharmacies to dispense the pills after completing a certificat­ion process, which would allow them to become available not only at the pharmacies but online by mail.

Walgreens and CVS started the certificat­ion process. But on Feb. 1, attorneys general in 20 states signed letters to both pharmacies threatenin­g them with legal action if they distribute abortion pills by mail, telling them it is “both unsafe and illegal.”

Walgreens last week said

 ?? ALLEN G. BREED, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boxes of the drug mifepristo­ne sit on a shelf at the West Alabama Women’s Center in Tuscaloosa, Ala., on March 16, 2022. Walgreens said on March 2that it will not start selling mifepristo­ne, an abortion pill, in 20states that had warned of legal consequenc­es if it did that.
ALLEN G. BREED, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boxes of the drug mifepristo­ne sit on a shelf at the West Alabama Women’s Center in Tuscaloosa, Ala., on March 16, 2022. Walgreens said on March 2that it will not start selling mifepristo­ne, an abortion pill, in 20states that had warned of legal consequenc­es if it did that.

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