Chicago Sun-Times

PRITZKER EARNS SPLIT DECISION IN COVID-19 RULINGS

Gov beats GOP in federal case but loses downstate county challenge by state rep

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

A downstate judge has ruled in favor of a Republican legislator in his lawsuit against Gov. J.B. Pritzker over whether the Democratic governor exceeded his legal authority in issuing a stay-at-home order in March to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

Just hours earlier, Pritzker notched a win in federal court against the Illinois Republican Party, which sued the governor claiming he violated the GOP’s constituti­onal rights to assemble during the coronaviru­s outbreak.

In the downstate lawsuit, state Rep. Darren Bailey, R-Xenia, and his attorneys fought hard to keep it in state court. And Clay County Judge Michael McHaney ruled in favor of the legislator. The ruling will be appealed.

According to the order, the judge ruled that the 30 days of emergency powers provided under the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act lapsed on April 8 and any executive orders in effect after that date relating to COVID-19 are void.

It also grants Bailey’s request that his complaint “be a representa­tive action and apply to all citizens of the state of Illinois.” But according to the governor’s office, that provision cannot apply statewide since other circuits have ruled the opposite, and those rulings are just as valid.

The judge ruled that neither the state constituti­on nor the emergency management act allows Pritzker “to restrict a citizen’s movement or activities and/or forcibly close business premises.”

Pritzker spokesman Jason Rubin said in a statement that the governor “will continue to prioritize Illinoisan­s’ health and safety first, and the people of Illinois have taken extraordin­ary care to follow health experts’ advice, which is why our state has the lowest positivity rate in the Midwest.”

Bailey in a tweet shortly after the order was given wrote, “Illinois is Open! Live Responsibl­e!”

Pritzker’s stay-at-home order survived a religious challenge twice in federal court in May. The only rebuke the Democratic governor has received is in Clay County, where McHaney has made his opposition to Pritzker’s executive orders clear. During one hearing, McHaney said “the Bill of Rights is being shredded” by Pritzker’s stay-at-home order.

That is in part why Pritzker’s lawyers have been moving lawsuits challengin­g his stay-at-home order out of state courts and into federal court.

McHaney is the same judge who in May entered a temporary restrainin­g order that freed Bailey — but no one else — from Pritzker’s stay-at-home order. That temporary restrainin­g order has since been lifted, at Bailey’s request.

Bailey — who was tossed from one day of a legislativ­e special session in Springfiel­d in May after refusing to wear a mask — then filed a revised complaint in the case.

The other ruling issued Thursday involved the Illinois Republican Party suit, filed in mid-June. It argued that while religious groups and protesters have been allowed to gather in groups of more than 10 under Pritzker’s disaster declaratio­n, political groups were not allowed to share the same freedoms — which they said are guaranteed under the U.S. Constituti­on.

But the judge rejected that argument.

“Granting plaintiffs the relief they seek would pose serious risks to public health,” U.S. District Court Judge Sara L. Ellis wrote in an opinion. “Plaintiffs contend that in-person speech is most effective, and their communicat­ions are hampered by gathering limits. But the current state of our nation demands that we sacrifice the benefits of in-person interactio­ns for the greater good.”

Ellis wrote that the “risks are too great” for the political organizati­on to be able to gather with no limits. She also wrote that the GOP can do phone banking, virtual strategy meetings and meet in groups of 50 or fewer. The state last Friday entered into Phase 4 of Pritzker’s reopening plan which allowed for a larger capacity for gatherings.

The Democratic governor in late April extended a COVID-19 executive order that allows for religious groups to gather in accordance with safety guidelines. It included freedom of religion as an “essential activity.” But all gatherings of more than 10 were still not advised.

Pritzker has attended several large events since the Minneapoli­s police killing of George Floyd and has defended those appearance­s by saying he was exercising his First Amendment rights.

The lawsuit cites one of those Pritzker appearance­s.

But despite the GOP’s arguments, Ellis wrote in her opinion that “the Constituti­on does not accord a political party the same express protection­s as it provides to religion.”

Attorneys for the plaintiffs, which also includes the Will County Republican Central Committee, the Schaumburg Township Republican Organizati­on and the Northwest Side GOP Club, have already filed a motion in federal court to appeal the ruling.

 ??  ?? State Rep. Darren Bailey Gov. J.B. Pritzker
State Rep. Darren Bailey Gov. J.B. Pritzker
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