
Cardinal Dolan: New York assisted suicide bill ‘cheapens human life’
Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York. / Credit: Jonah McKeown/CNA
CNA Staff, Jun 18, 2025 / 16:23 pm (CNA).
Leading Catholic voices in New York, including Cardinal Timothy Dolan, are urging the state’s Catholic governor to veto an assisted suicide bill that has no wait period or psychological evaluation requirement.
“This is the cheapening of human life,” Dolan said in a June 17 episode of “Conversations with Cardinal Dolan.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Catholic, has yet to publicly disclose her position on the bill. The state Senate passed the measure on June 9 in spite of bipartisan opposition in the New York Legislature, where numerous Democrats voted against it along with all Republicans.
Proponents of the bill say assisted suicide would expand end-of-life choices. New York state Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal, a Senate sponsor of the bill, said that New York “has made history” by passing the bill, which he says will “reduce human suffering.”
Dennis Poust, the executive director of the New York State Catholic Conference, called the bill “the worst assisted suicide bill in the country” because of its lack of patient guardrails.
While assisted suicide is legal in a dozen states and the District of Columbia, the New York bill is unique in that it has no waiting period, Poust said.
“You could get a terminal diagnosis from your doctor. You’ll be grief-stricken, you’ll be in despair, and you could at that moment request assisted suicide drugs from that doctor and then from a subsequent doctor next door,” Poust told “EWTN News Nightly” on June 13.
“The next day, you could be ending your life,” he said. “It’s egregious.”
Poust also criticized the lack of a psychological evaluation requirement in the bill.
“Everyone who gets a terminal diagnosis has a moment of depression,” he said. “We all know the five stages of grief, and depression is one of them. But the doctors don’t have to even go there. They can just prescribe the pills if you’re of sound mind.”
Dolan had earlier expressed hope in a June 10 episode of his show, recalling when he spoke with Hochul at a Puerto Rican parade earlier in the month.
The cardinal had praised Hochul for her work in support of mental health care. Hochul has promoted mental health support and suicide prevention during her tenure, including a billion-dollar effort to improve mental care.
“Suicide is an effect when somebody’s struggling emotionally as well as physically,” Dolan recalled telling the governor. “That’s when people are so desperate and we have to help their mental health so that they don’t go for suicide — that’s why we don’t want the physician-assisted suicide.”
“She didn’t commit herself, but something tells me her gut’s not into this,” Dolan continued. “I’m hoping she’ll take the courageous, right thing to do.”
Dolan urged local Catholics to write to the governor and share their opposition to the bill.
“This bill is just bad public policy,” Poust said. “It’s bad for people with disabilities, vulnerable people, people of color who tend to live in medically underserved areas and already get cheated in the health care system.”
“There are a lot of good reasons for the governor to veto this that have really nothing to do with her Catholic faith,” Poust continued.
Assisted suicide legislation has passed in multiple countries across the globe, including Canada. But these laws have seen backlash in many cases as assisted suicide has encroached on health care.
Poust urged anyone who is considering assisted suicide to seek out palliative care.
“We don’t want anyone to suffer,” Poust said. “We want people to avail themselves of hospice care. There are ways to control pain. There are ways to pass from this life to the next in peace and love and with caring people around you.”
“I would strongly urge people to not despair and to let God take you when he’s good and ready,” Poust concluded.