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Thursday, May 9, 2024

'Fervently advocating for common sense,' McLaughlin slams new Cook County vaccine mandate as unfair, impractical

Mclaughlin

"I find it reprehensible that you need less information to vote or enter the country it seems then to go to a local restaurant in Cook County,” Rep. Martin McLaughlin said. | Martin McLaughlin

"I find it reprehensible that you need less information to vote or enter the country it seems then to go to a local restaurant in Cook County,” Rep. Martin McLaughlin said. | Martin McLaughlin

The latest Cook County vaccination mandate continues a pattern of governmental overreach in Illinois, according to Republican state Rep. Martin McLaughlin, and residents will pay the price.

“At a time of crisis, I believe true leaders asked for more input from their council, their commissioners and legislators, and not less,” McLaughlin, who served as Barrington Hills village president until assuming his seat in Springfield in 2021, said at a recent news conference on the issue. “We stayed open throughout the COVID crisis without incident using common-sense safety measures. As a mayor, I had a unique perspective of witnessing firsthand exactly how the viruses and the mandates were affecting local businesses.”

McLaughlin believes that's a lesson Gov. J.B. Pritzker has yet to learn, pointing to new Cook County COVID-19 proof of vaccine requirements for businesses and park districts.

“I have been fervently advocating for common sense and local control since May of 2020,” he added. “As mayor in my town I was offered the same emergency, unilateral control opportunity from legal counsel, but I rejected it.”

Across Cook County, the proof of vaccine rule will apply to everyone age 5 and older and include such establishments as restaurants, bars, gyms and other venues like sports and entertainment arenas, NBC Chicago reported.

And it affects private citizens and small businesses disproportionately, McLaughlin says.

“The executive mandate from the county forced our citizens to stay within their homes, out of our schools, out of our places of worship and closed an assortment of businesses,” he added. "However, big box stores were allowed to remain open with record profits while devastating our main-street businesses in our community. As we enter 2022, the mayor of Chicago, the board president of Cook County and Gov. Pritzker continue unconstitutional use of these mandates on private citizens.”

McLaughlin argues the need for a change.

“We're entering soon our third year of the 15-day experiment to flatten the curve,” he said. “We need to learn to live with this virus and any future viruses in a better way to help protect the most vulnerable of our society. The data clearly shows who needs to be protected at this point. I am not anti vaccine, I’m pro common sense. 

"... I find it reprehensible that you need less information to vote or enter the country it seems then to go to a local restaurant in Cook County,” he said. “I’ve had enough of public officials acting as part-time epidemiologists and telling us its either vaccine or ventilator. We’ve learned a lot in the past year-and-a-half. It's time to put the experience, data and therapeutics into practice and drawing from successes in surrounding states and stop living in a bubble.”

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