Texas has a new abortion pill law. But at least one provider plans to
keep shipping them there
[September 19, 2025]
By GEOFF MULVIHILL
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has signed a first-of-its-kind law
that lets anyone sue prescribers and others responsible for getting
abortion pills into the state.
Supporters are heralding the law, which Abbott signed Wednesday, as a
way to enforce an existing ban. Abortion-rights advocates are bashing
the law, saying it has the potential to turn abortion opponents,
aggrieved former lovers and others into bounty hunters.
But it doesn't mean that organizations will stop sending pills into
Texas.
Angel Foster, who runs Massachusetts-based The MAP, which prescribes the
regimen of pills to women in every state, said her organization will
keep sending pills to women in Texas, as it has about 10,000 times in
the past two years.
“We really don’t change things unless we’re legally required to,” she
said.
Rebecca Nall, the founder of I Need an A, which runs a website with
abortion access information, suggested other providers also won't
change.
“We’re confident people in Texas (and every state) will still be able to
get abortion pills by mail,” she said in an email.
Pills are at the heart of a new generation of abortion lawsuits
The majority of abortions in the U.S. employ pills, usually a
combination of the drugs misoprostol and mifepristone.
Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 and allowed
states to enforce abortion bans, the method has moved to the center of
the latest legal and political battles.

At least eight Democratic-controlled states have adopted shield laws
that seek to protect medical professionals in their borders who
prescribe the pills via telehealth and send them to patients in states
where abortion or telehealth pill prescriptions are banned.
Those prescriptions are a key reason that the number of abortions has
not fallen despite 12 states enforcing bans on abortion at all stages of
pregnancy, with limited exceptions, and four more barring it after about
six weeks of gestation.
The Texas law allows $100,000 claims against prescribers and others
The Texas law, which is to take effect in three months, builds on an
approach the state used when it implemented an earlier abortion ban:
leaving enforcement to private people filing lawsuits rather than the
government.
Under this measure, anyone could file a claim for $100,000 against
people who cause the pills to be sent to Texas.
If a pregnant woman, the man who impregnated her or other close
relatives sue successfully, they could be entitled to collect the entire
$100,000. Others who sue would be in line for $10,000 — with the other
$90,000 going to charity.
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Dr. Angel Foster, co-founder of Massachusetts Medication Abortion
Access Project, points out on a map of the United States on May 13,
2025, in Somerville, Mass., to show where her organization provides
care. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)
 The law also answers a provision of
shield laws that allows protected prescribers to sue those who sue
them. The Texas law says that would not apply for the civil suits
that originate there.
One provider says her group won't be deterred
The Abortion Coalition for Telemedicine, which provides legal and
other support for abortion pill prescribers, is telling members that
the shield laws should protect them from civil suits from Texas,
said McKensey Smith, the group's deputy director.
Texas, the nation’s second most populous state, accounts for about
one-third of the pills The MAP prescribes.
Foster said that she expects other prescribers to keep sending the
pills to Texas, too.
She still anticipates the law will have an impact: Women seeking
abortion in Texas could stop telling others that they are planning
to seek pills from out-of-state providers lest those confidants use
the information to launch lawsuits.
“One of the effects will be to isolate abortion patients in Texas,”
Foster said.
Pill access is facing other court challenges
Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California,
Davis, said she expects that people sued under the Texas law will
make their own court claims, arguing that it is not enforceable.
“The drug manufacturers and the providers are all willing to take
the risk that the shield laws will protect them,” she said.
She said the result could be individual court decisions on whether
the Texas law applies in certain circumstances rather than one
sweeping ruling.
Those suits won't be the first legal test around abortion pills,
though.
Last month, Texas and Florida asked a court if they could join a
lawsuit filed by the attorneys general of Idaho, Kansas and Missouri
that seeks to have some federal approvals for mifepristone rolled
back — and possibly blocking telehealth prescriptions for it.
And a New York doctor accused of shipping pills out of state faces
two legal actions: criminal charges in Louisiana and a civil
judgment in Texas. New York officials are refusing to extradite her
or to enforce the judgment.
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