Gazette Endorsements: Governor
January 28, 2010Democrat: Patrick Quinn
Yet from his first days in public service, Quinn has been standing up for “the little guy” against the entrenched special interests. We want to see him stick to his reform guns, act on his passion for reform, and show some grit in dealing with the state’s entrenched political interests. In less than a year as governor, Quinn has some significant accomplishments, to be sure. And he has taken a particularly bold stand in calling for a state income tax hike. We support this course. Let’s be realistic: there’s no way out of this budget crisis without one.
Dan Hynes has been a great State Comptroller, particularly when it came to enacting the Rainy Day Fund, which helped alleviate the state’s budget crisis for a while when it began. Hynes is the best candidate when it comes to dealing with the crisis with the state pension funds, a particularly important issue in this community because it is home to the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Rather than blaming state workers for actually expecting the benefits promised them, or proposing raising the retirement age or sticking state pensions in dubious 401Ks, Hynes said the main problem with pensions is not benefits, but lack of state funding. Under Hynes, the state would develop a new long-term plan to pay off the pension debt and then adhere to it.
In a highly charged campaign, candidates are prone to sling mud at one another. But, we are disappointed with Hynes’s recent attempt to reach into the “way back” machine and draw on the late Mayor Harold Washington in a TV spot. The ad in question refers to when the Mayor fired Quinn as his director of the City Department of Revenue in 1987. The attack ad is a poor attempt at swaying the African-American vote. Hynes’s willingness to lean on the legend of the late Mayor is puzzling at best, considering Hynes’s own father launched a campaign to unseat Mayor Washington, only to pull out late in the process.
Hynes would be an excellent choice for governor for those who want change, particularly concerning state pensions. But because Quinn has proven to be as steady a hand as we could expect in this crisis, we feel he deserves a full term to prove himself. The Gazette endorses Patrick Quinn for governor in the Democratic primary.
Republican: Bill Brady
Ryan is the front runner for the Republican nomination for governor. He wrongly prosecuted Rolando Cruz three times (so much for double jeopardy) in the killing of Jeanine Nicarico. In 2009, after a quarter-century of maintaining Cruz was guilty despite evidence to the contrary, Ryan finally apologized.
An individual who refuses to change his views despite all evidence is not what we need in the governor’s office during these troubled times. Neither is somebody who wants to privatize the tollway system, as Ryan does. We see how well that worked with Chicago’s parking meters. Our choice is State Senator Bill Brady of Bloomington. One of his campaign’s cornerstones is reforming what he rightly calls the state’s “grossly underfunded public pension systems” while safeguarding the retirement security of state employees, university faculty, and teachers. That’s an important issue in this community, which is home to the University of Illinois at Chicago. We do take issue with his idea of possibly putting state pensions into 401Ks, however.
As a state legislator, Brady has worked to offer homeowners property tax relief, promoted use of alternate energy sources, and was a primary sponsor of legislation to end “pay-to-play” politics. Also, he opposes expanding legalized gambling in Illinois. He believes the state must exercise “real fiscal discipline to balance the budget and to stop spending money the state does not have.” What an idea! The Gazette endorses Bill Brady for the Republican nomination for governor.





