(OSV News) — Illinois Catholics and pro-life advocates have turned their sights on Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker’s office after the state Senate in the early hours of Oct. 31 narrowly voted to legalize physician-assisted suicide.
The measure had already passed the state House in May, but by the time the spring session ended, both houses did not have consensus.
The bill’s passage puts Illinois on track to being the 12th state, plus the District of Columbia, to have such a law.
‘Assaults on human dignity’
“With all the assaults on human dignity and the growing number of vulnerable people we see every day, sadly the leaders and members of the General Assembly who voted for this, offer us suicide as its response,” said the Catholic Conference of Illinois in a statement.
The conference, which represents the Catholic Church at the state Capitol in Springfield, said it asked the governor “not only to veto this bill in totality, but also to address humanely the reasons why some view assisted suicide as their only option and to heed the impact of similar legislation on other states and nations.”
Robert Gilligan, the conference’s executive director, said his office is planning next steps.
Hoping to reach out to Pritzker
“We’re talking about what we need to do to reach out to him, what we should do to make sure that we still have one, final, chance at stopping this from becoming law,” he said.
Gilligan told OSV News the conference is very much focused on the task “for however long it takes.”
Pritzker has 60 days to act — sign, veto or leave untouched, which results in automatic enactment — after receiving the bill.
Illinois Right to Life President Mary Kate Zander urged subscribers of the group’s newsletters to contact Pritzker’s office.
Making a plea for prayers
“We cannot give up yet. There is still time to defeat this horrible bill,” said Zander, who also made a plea for prayers “for our legislators, for our governor, and for our state.”
The “End-of-Life Options for Terminally Ill Patients Act” allows for people deemed by a physician to have six months or less to live, to receive prescriptions for powerful drugs at very high doses in order to take their own lives.
The bill also states: “Actions taken in accordance with this Act do not, for any purposes, constitute suicide, assisted suicide, euthanasia, mercy killing, homicide, murder, manslaughter, elder abuse or neglect, or any other civil or criminal violation under the law.” It also maintains suicide is not to be listed as the cause of death, instead it would be the original diagnosed illness determined to be terminal.
Lawmaker’s personal stake
The bill was introduced by Sen. Linda Holmes of Aurora, just west of Chicago, in the 2025 spring legislative session. Holmes said she had a personal stake in the proposal.
“My father died of lung cancer when he was 49. And I mean, it’s a horrendous way to watch somebody die. I mean, it’s horrible. It’s painful. There’s a lot of suffering,” she told OSV News days after introducing the measure in January.
But the Catholic Conference of Illinois argued that making suicide legal in any form could have a negative impact on “young impressionable minds.” It referenced Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics from 2023 that show suicide is “the second-leading cause of death” for young people between ages 10 and 34.
Warn of ‘suicide contagion’
The conference also warned of “suicide contagion,” which they said the National Institutes of Health have labeled a real risk to young people who are exposed to it.
“It defies common sense for our state to enact a 9-8-8 suicide hotline, increase funding for suicide prevention programs and then pass a law that, based on the experience of other jurisdictions, results in more suicide,” the conference’s statement said.
The bill did not get far in either house in the spring. But very close to the end of the spring session it moved through the House as an amendment in a food preparation and sanitation bill, essentially replacing the entire food regulation bill.
Changed bill retained original name
Senate Bill 1950, although completely gutted, retained its referring name, “Sanitary Food Preparation,” on the Legislature’s roll call screen that showed the total number of yea (30) and nay (27) votes, with two abstentions.
“It’s profoundly disappointing and sad that the Legislature did this,” Gilligan told OSV News. “That now, we’re offering death as an option for people who are in very difficult situations. And as we tried to do, we tried to point out that there’s a moral alternative to somebody who is concerned about suffering at the end of life, and that’s called hospice and palliative care.”
Simone Orendain is an OSV News correspondent. She writes from Chicago.
The post Illinois Catholics appeal to Pritzker after Legislature passes assisted suicide bill first appeared on OSV News.
