Life
December 12, 2025

Thomas More Society: Illinois Has "Crossed a Moral and Legal Red Line" as Gov. Pritzker Signs Assisted Suicide Bill

Thomas More Society: Illinois Has "Crossed a Moral and Legal Red Line" as Gov. Pritzker Signs Assisted Suicide Bill

December 12, 2025
By
Katie Clancy
Press Release
December 12, 2025

Thomas More Society: Illinois Has "Crossed a Moral and Legal Red Line" as Gov. Pritzker Signs Assisted Suicide Bill

Chicago, IL - Thomas More Society condemns Governor J.B. Pritzker’s signing of Senate Bill 1950 today, calling the law legalizing physician-assisted suicide “a tragic and dangerous turning point for the moral and constitutional landscape of our state” that puts the elderly, disabled, and vulnerable at risk.

“This is a dark and sorrowful day for Illinois. When the state signals that some lives are no longer worth living, the most vulnerable pay the price,” said Thomas Olp, Executive Vice President at Thomas More Society. “Instead of offering true compassion, support, and care, this law offers a fatal prescription. That is not mercy. It is abandonment.”

“By legalizing physician-assisted suicide, the Land of Lincoln has crossed a profound moral and legal red line. As signed into law, this fatal misstep places vulnerable lives at risk, tramples the inherent dignity of human life, and erodes the foundational conscience rights of medical professionals and religious medical practices.”

In addition to its grave social and moral implications, the just-signed law threatens the conscience rights physicians opposed to facilitating assisted suicide, as well as the freedom of association of religious medical institutions. SB 1950 requires physicians who object to assisted suicide on moral or religious grounds to refer patients to providers who will participate in ending their lives.  

“The State is forcing doctors to become active participants and cooperators in a patient’s suicide—no matter if their faith, ethics, or Hippocratic Oath forbid it,” Olp emphasized. “This is unconscionable coercion, plain and simple. No doctor should be ordered by the government to participate directly or indirectly in a process that deliberately ends a human life.”

Beyond the law’s compelled-referral mandate, the law, as passed by the General Assembly, would also force religious hospitals and clinics to retain staff who promote assisted deaths on-site, as long as those staff provide lethal drugs off-site. “This is a Trojan horse designed to violate and undermine the missions of religious healthcare institutions. Gov. Pritzker’s assisted suicide law threatens the integrity of Catholic and Christian medical institutions statewide.”

“We will defend the right of every healthcare professional to practice medicine consistent with their conscience and oath, and we will fight any state effort to force religious healthcare institutions to violate their beliefs,” Olp added.  

“State law should never endorse the idea that suffering or sickness makes a life disposable,” Olp continued. “We urge Illinoisans, people of faith, dedicated medical professionals, and all who cherish human life, to stand with us in fighting to defend the vulnerable and protect fundamental freedoms.”