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House approves bill would remove 'conscience' as basis for refusing vaccine

SPRINGFIELD - Illinois law has for more than four decades protected those who oppose providing or receiving medical treatment because of their religious beliefs. Now Democrats want an exception to allow repercussions for those who refuse vaccinations in the battle against COVID-19.

Long considered a shield for physicians whose religious beliefs precluded their performing abortions, the Illinois Health Care Right of Conscience Act has become a pandemic lightning rod. Lawsuits invoking it are challenging employers trying to enforce rules requiring testing for or inoculation against the coronavirus.

"The Health Care Right of Conscience Act was never intended to cover a pandemic where we're trying to keep people alive," Gov. J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat, said after a news conference in Springfield Wednesday.

The House vote came after 10 p.m. Wednesday, passing on a 64-52 roll call with two present votes. No Republicans voted for it. It still needs Senate approval before it can head to the governor, who supports it..

Rep. Robyn Gabel, an Evanston Democrat, calls her proposed COVID-19 carve-out a "clarification." Proponents say it doesn't require vaccination, just bars right of conscience as a reason for refusal.

Republicans challenged Gabel during committee action this week.

"At what point does the government stop telling people they can't take their health care into their own hands?" asked Republican Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer, noting that if diagnosed with cancer, he could refuse prescribed chemotherapy.

"That doesn't affect all these other people around you," Gabel replied. "That's not a communicable disease. We are doing this to address a communicable disease that has worldwide impact."

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Robyn Gabel
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