Pritzker says there is not mask conflict, just politics
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[February 24, 2022]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – There is no
confusion, only politics, when it comes to the controversy over mask and
other COVID-19 mandates for Illinois schools, according to Gov. J.B.
Pritzker.
Pritzker has had mask and vaccine mandates for schools in place through
executive orders since the fall.
According to the Fourth District Court of Appeals, Pritzker’s emergency
rules for schools to require masks, exclude “close contacts,” and
require vaccine or testing for staff, aren't in effect after being
blocked by a bipartisan legislative panel last week.
Plaintiffs sued more than 160 school districts, state education
officials and the Pritzker administration, saying their due process
rights to challenge quarantine measures are violated by the mandates.
The governor appealed to the Illinois Supreme Court Tuesday.
While he had previously announced a Feb. 28 end to the statewide mask
mandate at most places, Pritzker signaled Wednesday that he would be
lifting his school mask mandate, but didn’t give a specific date. He
said the office needs that authority to require things like masks for
everyone despite their health status for if there’s another variant, or
another pandemic.
“We want to be able to do the right thing for the people across the
state and so we hope that the supreme court will see that and rule on
that despite the decision by the appellate court,” Pritzker said
Wednesday in Decatur at an unrelated event.
Hundreds of school districts across the state have gone mask optional or
mask recommended, rather than mask mandated, since the Sangamon County
Circuit Court’s Feb. 4 ruling that the governor’s mandates are null and
void.
Pritzker said there’s not a controversy.
“We actually don’t think there’s any lack of clarity,” Pritzker said.
“The judge decided differently, but I also think there were some
politics in that … The conflict is political, it is not what is in the
written law.”
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“That is a dangerous statement,” said state Sen. Darren Bailey, R-Xenia,
who’s also running for the Republican nomination for governor. “We live
in a free, constitutional republic. We’re smart enough to decide for
ourselves whether or not we need to be wearing a mask or not.”
Bailey said the General Assembly has not taken up whether people’s due
process rights should be changed.
“We’ve never once had a bill put in front of us to give the governor
that authority, or to change law that makes masks a requirement,” Bailey
said.
Other Republican gubernatorial candidates are also critical of Pritzker’s insistence on the mandates.
Former state Sen. Paul Schimpf, R-Waterloo, said Pritzker’s insistence
his mandates are in effect is a “complete disregard for the rule of
law.”
“J.B. Pritzker needs to look at himself in the mirror and ask whether he
is interested in supporting the rule of law in Illinois, because clearly
he is not,” Schimpf said.
Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin’s campaign said “Pritzker has ruled the state
unilaterally under the guise of emergency powers.”
“It’s time for the governor to accept that the people of Illinois want
their seat back at the table when it comes to the decision-making
affecting their communities,” Irvin spokesperson Eleni Demertzis said.
"Real leadership is representing these voices, something he has ignored
for the last two years."
Venture capitalist Jesse Sullivan said the governor “will stop at
nothing to ensure he alone controls the lives of our school children.
"The governor has proven he only cares to listen to the most extreme
ideologues within the Chicago Teachers Union and Washington D.C,”
Sullivan said. “As governor, I promise to put parents’ voices first." |