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Pat Quinn (politician)

Patrick Joseph Quinn Jr. (born December 16, 1948) is an American politician who served as the 41st governor of Illinois from 2009 to 2015. A Democrat, Quinn began his career as an activist by founding the Coalition for Political Honesty.[1] He was elected lieutenant governor in 2002 and served under governor Rod Blagojevich. After Blagojevich was impeached and removed from office in 2009, Quinn assumed the governorship. He secured a full term in office in the 2010 gubernatorial election, but later lost his bid for a second term in the 2014 gubernatorial election to his opponent Bruce Rauner.

Pat Quinn
41st Governor of Illinois
In office
January 29, 2009 – January 12, 2015
LieutenantVacant (2009–2011)
Sheila Simon (2011–2015)
Preceded byRod Blagojevich
Succeeded byBruce Rauner
45th Lieutenant Governor of Illinois
In office
January 13, 2003 – January 29, 2009
GovernorRod Blagojevich
Preceded byCorinne Wood
Succeeded bySheila Simon
70th Treasurer of Illinois
In office
January 14, 1991 – January 9, 1995
GovernorJim Edgar
Preceded byJerome Cosentino
Succeeded byJudy Baar Topinka
Commissioner of the
Cook County Board of Appeals
In office
1982–1986
Personal details
Born
Patrick Joseph Quinn, Jr.

(1948-12-16) December 16, 1948 (age 74)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Julie Hancock
(m. 1982; div. 1986)
Children2
Residence(s)Chicago, Illinois
EducationGeorgetown University (BS)
Northwestern University (JD)
Signature

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Quinn is a graduate of Georgetown University and Northwestern University School of Law. Quinn began his career as a tax attorney in private practice before working as an aide to then-Illinois Governor Dan Walker. He was elected to one term as a commissioner on the Cook County Board of Appeals, serving from 1982 to 1986; he later served as revenue director in the administration of Chicago Mayor Harold Washington. Quinn was elected Treasurer of Illinois in 1990 and served one term.

In Illinois' 2002 gubernatorial election, Quinn won the Democratic nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois in the primary and was paired with then-U.S. Representative Rod Blagojevich in the general election. He was sworn into office as lieutenant governor in 2003. Both Quinn and Blagojevich were reelected in 2006. Quinn assumed the governorship on January 29, 2009, after Governor Blagojevich was impeached and removed from office on corruption charges.

Quinn was narrowly elected to a full term in office in the 2010, defeating Republican State Senator Bill Brady by a margin of less than 1% out of about 3.5 million votes cast. Quinn was narrowly defeated in 2014 by Republican candidate Bruce Rauner.[2] Quinn unsuccessfully ran in the Democratic primary for Attorney General of Illinois in 2018.[3]

Early life and education edit

Quinn was born in 1948 in Chicago. His family moved to the suburb of Hinsdale, Illinois, when he was a child. The son of Eileen (Prindiville), a school secretary, and Patrick Joseph Quinn, a public relations official for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago,[4][5][6][7] his grandparents were Irish. He was reared a Catholic and attended the local Catholic elementary school, St. Isaac Jogues.[8] He graduated in 1967 from Fenwick High School, a Catholic school in Oak Park, Illinois;[9] while at Fenwick, Quinn was the cross-country team captain and sports editor of the school newspaper. Quinn went on to graduate from Georgetown University in 1971 with a bachelor's degree from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, where he was a student of Professor Jan Karski[10] and a sports editor for The Hoya.[11] After taking a few years off from education, he earned a Juris Doctor degree from Northwestern University School of Law in 1980.[12] In 1982, Quinn married Julie Ann Hancock. The marriage produced two sons, Davey Quinn and Patrick Quinn IV, before the couple's 1986 divorce.[13]

From 1976 through 1978, he worked as an economist for the company Coilcraft.[14]

Political activism edit

Before running for public office, Quinn was involved in political action, serving as an aide to Governor Daniel Walker from 1973 through 1975.[9][14] He was first put on the political map in the late 1970s by leading a petition to amend the 1970 Illinois Constitution with the "Illinois Initiative". This amendment was intended to increase the power of public referendums in the political process and recalls for public officials.[9] The petition drive was successful, but the Illinois Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the Illinois Initiative was an "unconstitutional constitutional amendment," and thus never was presented to voters.[15]

Quinn drew more attention to his causes by holding press conferences on Sundays, seen as a slow news day.[9] While still in law school, Quinn scored his first political success in 1980, earning a reputation as a reformer on the Illinois political scene. Through his organization, "The Coalition for Political Honesty," he initiated and led the statewide campaign for the Cutback Amendment to the Illinois Constitution, ultimately reducing the size of the Illinois House of Representatives from 177 to 118 members.[15][16]

Early political career edit

In 1982, Quinn was elected as commissioner of the Cook County Board of Appeals, now known as the Cook County Board of Review.[9] During his time on the board, Quinn was instrumental in the creation of the "Citizens Utility Board", a consumer watchdog organization.[14]

Quinn did not seek re-election to the Cook County Board of Tax Appeals, in 1986, instead opting to run an unsuccessful campaign for the Democratic nomination for Illinois State Treasurer, losing to Jerome Cosentino. After this defeat, Quinn briefly served in the administration of Chicago Mayor Harold Washington as Revenue Director in 1987.[14][17][18] Quinn also served on the local school council of Sayre Magnet School on Chicago's West Side.[19]

State Treasurer edit

Quinn's bid for office was successful in the 1990 election for Illinois Treasurer, defeating Peg McDonnell Breslin in the Democratic primary and Greg Baise in the general election.[20][21] Quinn campaigned as a populist reformer in opposition to big government.[19]

He pledged during his campaign that he would seek to transform the office into a consumer advocate-style position.[19] As a candidate, he refused to take campaign contributions from banking officials.[19] He also pledged as a candidate to modernize the office and maximize returns on state deposits through use of electronic fund transfers and through expanding linked-deposit programs.[19] He released an "Invest in Illinois" plan which proposed competitive bidding from financial institutions wanting to be state depositories.[19] He also promised that he would not deposit or invest assets used to pay employee retirement benefits in junk bonds.[19] He also pledged to implement a professional code of ethics for the office's employees.[19]

He served in the position of Illinois Treasurer from 1991 to 1995. During this period, he was publicly critical of Illinois Secretary of State and future governor, George Ryan. Specifically, he drew attention to special vanity license plates that Ryan's office provided for cronies and the politically connected. This rivalry led Quinn to unsuccessfully challenge Ryan in the 1994 general election for Secretary of State, winning the Democratic primary but losing in the general.[22][23]

U.S. Senate campaign edit

Quinn then took his aspirations to the national stage. When United States Senator Paul Simon chose not to seek re-election in 1996, Quinn entered the race. However Dick Durbin won the Democratic primary and eventually the Senate seat.[24]

1998 lieutenant gubernatorial campaign edit

Quinn sought the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in 1998, but was narrowly defeated by Mary Lou Kearns. Quinn did not initially accept the count and charged fraud, but several weeks after the election he declined to ask the Illinois Supreme Court for a recount and endorsed Kearns.

In 1998, Quinn protested an increase in state legislators' salaries by urging citizens to send tea bags to the governor, Jim Edgar. The tactic was a reference to the Boston Tea Party.[25] As lieutenant governor, he would later repeat this tactic in 2006, urging consumers to include a tea bag when paying their electricity bills, to protest rate hikes by Commonwealth Edison.[26]

Lieutenant governor edit

 
Quinn as lieutenant governor in 2006

Quinn won the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in March 2002, and subsequently won the general election on the Democratic ticket alongside gubernatorial nominee, Rod Blagojevich. In Illinois, candidates for lieutenant governor and governor at that time ran in separate primary elections, but were conjoined as a single ticket for the general election.[9] This same ticket won re-election in 2006, where Quinn was unopposed in the primary.[15] While Lieutenant Governor, according to his official biography, his priorities were consumer advocacy, environmental protection, health care, broadband deployment, and veterans' affairs.[27]

On December 14, 2008, when Quinn was asked about his relationship with Blagojevich, he said, "Well, he's a bit isolated. I tried to talk to the Governor, but the last time I spoke to him was in August of 2007. I think one of the problems is the Governor did sort of seal himself off from all the statewide officials ... Attorney General Madigan and myself and many others."[28] Blagojevich had announced in 2006 that Quinn was not to be considered part of his administration.[29]

Governor of Illinois edit

Succession and elections edit

On January 29, 2009, Rod Blagojevich was removed from office by a vote of 59–0 by the Illinois State Senate.[30] Quinn became Governor of Illinois.[31]

2010 gubernatorial election edit

In the Democratic primary for governor in 2010, Quinn defeated State Comptroller Daniel Hynes with 50.4% of the vote.[32] On March 27, 2010, Illinois Democratic leaders selected Sheila Simon to replace Scott Lee Cohen on the ballot, after Cohen won the February 2010 Democratic primary to be Illinois' Lieutenant Governor, but later withdrew amid controversies involving his personal life.[33] In the general election Quinn's campaign aired television ads produced by Joe Slade White that repeatedly asked the question of his opponent, "Who is this guy?"[34] Ben Nuckels was the general election Campaign Manager and was named a "Rising Star of Politics" by Campaigns & Elections magazine for his efforts with Quinn.[35]

Quinn won the general election on November 2, 2010, by a narrow margin against Republican candidate Bill Brady.[36] Quinn's victory was named by RealClearPolitics.com as the No. 5 General Election upset in the country; Politico said it was the 7th closest gubernatorial in American history.[37]

2014 gubernatorial election edit

Quinn declared a run for re-election for 2014.[38] In the summer of 2013, former White House Chief of Staff and former United States Secretary of Commerce William M. Daley declared a run for governor in the Democratic Primary against Quinn, but later dropped out.[39][40] Quinn chose Paul Vallas, the former Chicago Public Schools CEO, as his running-mate.[41] Quinn was challenged in the Democratic Primary by Tio Hardiman, the former director of CeaseFire, but won 72%-28% and faced Republican businessman Bruce Rauner for the general election.

The majority of major Illinois newspapers endorsed Rauner,[42] but Quinn was endorsed by the Chicago Defender,[43] the Rockford Register Star,[44] and The Southern Illinoisan.[45]

Quinn was defeated by Rauner in the general election, 50%-46%. He lost every county except Cook County. His term as governor ended on January 12, 2015.

Governorship edit

As governor, Quinn faced a state with a reputation for corruption—the two previous governors both went to federal prison—and after two years polls showed Quinn himself was the "Nation's most unpopular governor."[46] The main issue was a fiscal crisis in meeting the state's budget and its long-term debt as the national economic slump continued and Illinois did poorly in terms of creating jobs. Quinn spoke often to the public and met regularly with state leaders, in stark contrast to Rod Blagojevich's seclusion from others. On August 20, 2013 Quinn signed a bill into law that raised the rural interstate speed limit in Illinois to 70 mph. It was previously 65 mph. The bill also raised the speed limit on the Illinois Toll Road. The law became effective at midnight January 1, 2014.

Budget, debt, and taxes edit

Quinn announced several "belt-tightening" programs to help curb the state deficit. In July 2009, Quinn signed a $29 billion capital bill to provide construction and repair funds for Illinois roads, mass transit, schools, and other public works projects. The capital bill, known as "Illinois Jobs Now!", was the first since Governor George H. Ryan's Illinois FIRST plan, which was enacted in the late-1990s.[47] On July 7, 2009, he for the second time in a week vetoed a budget bill, calling it "out of balance", his plan being to more significantly fix the budget gap in Illinois.[48] In March 2009, Quinn called for a 1.5 percentage point increase in the personal income tax rate. To help offset the increased rate, he also sought to triple the amount shielded from taxation (or the "personal exemption") – from $2,000 per person to $6,000.[49] However, the bill that eventually passed increased the personal income tax by 2%.

With the state budget deficit projected to hit $15 billion in 2011, the legislature in early 2011 raised the personal income tax from 3% to 5%, and the corporation profits tax 4.8% to 7%. Governor Quinn's office projected the new taxes will generate $6.8 billion a year, enough to balance the annual budget and begin reducing the state's backlog of about $8.5 billion in unpaid bills.[50] A report from the Civic Federation in September 2011 projected a $8.3 billion deficit to end the budget year.[51]

 
Governor Quinn at the Green expo in 2009

After three years of tax increases for workers and businesses, ending with an increase in corporate taxes in 2011 from 5% to 7%, the national recession left the economy in trouble. During an annual budget address on February 22, 2012 to the Illinois Legislature, Quinn warned that the state's financial system was nearing collapse.[52][53] The Associated Press reported that Quinn feared Illinois was "on the verge of a financial meltdown because of pension systems eating up every new dollar and health care costs climbing through the roof."[54] According to the Civic Federation, Illinois is only able to remain solvent by not paying its bills on time.[53] Quinn advocated Medicaid and healthcare cuts totaling $1.6 billion in 2012; critics including Democratic State Representative Mary E. Flowers stated the cuts would remove hundreds of thousands of the poor and elderly from public health programs.[55] The unprecedented cuts were too small to resolve the long-term issue according to rating agencies that downgraded Illinois to the lowest credit rating of any US state in 2012. As of November 2012, unpaid pension obligations totaled $85 billion with a backlog of $8 billion.[56]

In an effort to reduce the state's financial obligations, in November 2012 Quinn cancelled contracts with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. Union officials contended that "Quinn wanted concessions so deep that they are an insult to every state employee," while the administration contended that the state is paying salaries and benefits at levels that "exceed the salaries and benefits of other unionized state workers across the country."[56] As of December 2012, Illinois had the fifth highest unemployment rate in the United States, and by March 2013, Illinois public-employee pension liability reached $100 billion.[57][58]

Pat Quinn has been a major supporter of the controversial Illiana Expressway.[59]

In 2009, Quinn signed into law the Video Gaming Act which legalized the use of video gambling machines in Illinois. Quinn had previously denounced video gambling as a "bad bet". Quinn said the legislation was necessary to make up revenue due to the recession. A 2019 ProPublica investigation found that Illinois gambling regulators were underfunded and understaffed, and the gambling failed to meet projected revenues for the state's public coffers.[60]

Ethics reform and corruption allegations edit

On January 5, 2009, Quinn appointed Patrick M. Collins to chair the Illinois Reform Commission, which was tasked with making recommendations for ethical reform for Illinois government.[61][62]

On February 20, 2009, Quinn called for the resignation of US Senator Roland Burris, the man appointed to the United States Senate by Blagojevich to fill the vacant seat created by the resignation of Barack Obama. He changed his position, however, following pressure from prominent African Americans who threatened electoral repercussions.[63]

On March 3, 2009, the Associated Press reported that Quinn had "paid his own expenses" many times as lieutenant governor, contradicting Blagojevich's accusations against Quinn.[64][65] As a rule, he either paid his own way, or stayed at "cut rate hotels" (such as Super 8), and never charged the state for his meals.[65][66]

In June 2009, Quinn launched a panel, chaired by Abner Mikva, to investigate unethical practices at the University of Illinois amid fears that a prior investigation would be ineffective in instituting necessary reforms. The panel was charged with searching the admissions practices, amid reports that the public university was a victim of corruption.[67] The panel found evidence of favoritism and its investigation culminated in the resignation of all but two University trustees.[68]

In Spring 2014, federal prosecutors and the Illinois Legislative Audit Commission launched an investigation into Quinn's $55 million Neighborhood Recovery Initiative, a program launched weeks before 2010 election.[69][70]

On October 22, a federal judge appointed an independent monitor to oversee hiring at the Illinois Department of Transportation. This followed a three-year investigation by the Illinois executive inspector general that uncovered politically motivated hiring at IDOT, which started under Gov. Blagojevich.[71][72]

Environment and energy edit

 
Quinn in May 2010, holding up a bill he signed into law moments before (96th General Assembly, SB 3429), which requires state government to conduct an energy audit of buildings that will be used for future energy efficiency standards.

Quinn won generally high praise for his leadership on environmental issues, going back at least as far as when he was lieutenant governor, where he helped develop annual statewide conferences on green building, created a state day to celebrate and defend rivers,[73] and promoted measures such as rain gardens for water conservation. As governor, Quinn helped pass measures on solar and wind energy,[74] including sourcing electricity for the state capitol from wind power, and helped secure funding for high-speed rail in the midwest corridor. As Governor and Lt. Governor, Quinn Co-Chaired the Illinois Green Government Council, a council that focused on greening state government and reducing waste. The Illinois Green Government Council produced public annual sustainability reports tracking overall state government energy usage, fuel usage, water usage, and waste [75] In 2010 and 2014, the Sierra Club, Illinois's largest environmental group, endorsed Quinn, calling him "The Green Governor."[76][77] Quinn faced protests and strong opposition from environmentalists after his support for a controversial law to regulate and launch fracking.

Social issues edit

On March 9, 2011, Quinn signed the bill which abolished the death penalty in Illinois.[78] On signing the bill, Quinn stated,

"It is impossible to create a perfect system, one that is free of all mistakes, free of all discrimination with respect to race or economic circumstance or geography. To have a consistent, perfect death penalty system, I have concluded, after looking at everything I've been given, that that's impossible in our state. I think it's the right and just thing to abolish the death penalty."[79]

In an interview with The New York Times, Quinn attributed his decision to the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin who had argued until the end of his life for a “consistent ethic of life" that included opposing capital punishment. To date, capital punishment is still outlawed in Illinois.[80]

On May 17, 2012, Quinn appointed Brandon Bodor to be Executive Director of the Serve Illinois Commission. On September 11, 2012, the two announced that the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) had awarded $8.4 million to enable 1,200 volunteers in 29 AmeriCorps programs to better serve Illinois communities.[81]

Quinn is an advocate for gun control, supporting an assault weapons ban, high-capacity magazine ban and universal background checks for Illinois.[82] Quinn has also been known for criticizing concealed carry legislation in Illinois (which would allow a person to have a concealed handgun on their person in public), and the National Rifle Association of America.[83] Despite this opposition, the Illinois General Assembly legalized concealed carry in the state on July 9, 2013, overriding Quinn's veto. This made Illinois the last state in the U.S. to enact this type of legislation.[84]

In Quinn's 2013 State of the State address, he declared his commitment to the legalization of same sex marriage.[85] After a months-long battle in the legislature, Quinn signed the Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act into law[86] on November 20, 2013, before a crowd of thousands, making Illinois the 16th state in the nation to legalize same-sex marriage.[87] He had previously signed a bill legalizing civil unions on January 31, 2011.[88]

Post-gubernatorial activities edit

 
Quinn at the 2018 Chicago Pride Parade, June 2018

Quinn has kept a low profile since leaving office, volunteering for causes like veterans' affairs and consumer protection.[89] Quinn has been critical of his successor, Bruce Rauner, calling him "anti-worker" and "dishonest." He has stated that he is interested in grassroots petitions.[90]

On June 12, 2016, Quinn announced a new petition drive called Take Charge Chicago to put a binding referendum on the Chicago ballot to place a two-term limit on the Mayor of Chicago and create a new elected position called the Consumer Advocate.[91][92] As of mid-2017, that is still ongoing.

On October 27, 2017, Quinn announced he would run for Illinois Attorney General in the 2018 election.[3] Quinn was generally regarded as the most well-known candidate in the race,[93] however he narrowly lost the nomination to State Senator Kwame Raoul on March 20, 2018.

For the 2020 election cycle, Quinn championed a citizens initiated ballot item which would ask voters in Evanston whether the city should adopt a system under which binding citizen initiated referendums to create city ordinances would be allowed. This ballot question was rejected by the city's election board, a decision subsequently upheld in the Circuit Court of Cook County and the Illinois Appeals Court.[94][95]

During the 2023 Chicago mayoral election, Quinn flirted with the idea of running for Chicago mayor, going as far as collecting signatures to appear on the ballot.[96] However, he declined to run in the election and subsequently endorsed U.S. Representative Chuy Garcia's candidacy in the first round of voting,[97] and then his former running mate Paul Vallas in the run-off.[98]

Electoral history edit

For Illinois Attorney General edit

Democratic primary results, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kwame Raoul 374,667 30.2
Democratic Pat Quinn 340,163 27.4
Democratic Sharon Fairley 156,070 12.6
Democratic Nancy Rotering 115,974 9.3
Democratic Scott Drury 98,246 7.9
Democratic Jesse Ruiz 67,706 5.5
Democratic Renato Mariotti 49,891 4.0
Democratic Aaron Goldstein 37,987 3.1
Total votes 1,159,701 100

As Governor of Illinois (with Lt. Governor) edit

2014 edit

Illinois gubernatorial election, 2014[99]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bruce Rauner/Evelyn Sanguinetti 1,823,627 50.27
Democratic Pat Quinn/Paul Vallas (Incumbent) 1,681,343 46.35
Libertarian Chad Grimm/Alex Cummings 121,534 3.35
Write-In Various candidates 1,186 0.03
Majority 142,284 3.92%
Total votes 3,627,690 100
Republican gain from Democratic
Democratic primary results[100]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pat Quinn (Incumbent) 321,818 71.94
Democratic Tio Hardiman 125,500 28.06
Total votes 447,318 100

2010 edit

Illinois gubernatorial election, 2010[101]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Pat Quinn (Incumbent) 1,745,219 46.79% -3.00%
Republican Bill Brady 1,713,385 45.94% +6.68%
Independent Scott Lee Cohen 135,705 3.64%
Green Rich Whitney 100,756 2.70% -7.66%
Libertarian Lex Green 34,681 0.93%
Majority 31,834 0.85% -9.68%
Turnout 3,729,989
Democratic hold Swing
Democratic primary results[102]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pat Quinn (Incumbent) 462,049 50.46
Democratic Dan Hynes 453,677 49.54
Total votes 915,726 100.00

As Lt. Governor (with Governor) edit

For Illinois Secretary of State edit

  • 1994 – Illinois Secretary of State

As state treasurer edit

  • 1990 – Illinois Treasurer[20]

References edit

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  4. ^ Michael Barone and Chuck McCutcheon, The Almanac of American Politics: 2012 (2011) p. 512.
  5. ^ "Pat Quinn's mom shows toughness, love on the campaign trail". Daily Herald. November 6, 2010.
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  7. ^ . uis.edu. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved November 5, 2014.
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  59. ^ Quinn underlines support for Illiana Expressway
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  64. ^ "Ill. Gov Quinn mostly paid his own way," USA Today, March 3, 2009, at 3A, found at USA Today website. Retrieved March 4, 2009.
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  67. ^ Malone, Tara; Stacy St. Clair (June 11, 2009). "University of Illinois clout: Gov. Pat Quinn gives clout-list panel its marching orders". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 8, 2009.
  68. ^ "Report & Recommendations" (PDF). State of Illinois Admissions Review Commission. August 7, 2009. Retrieved October 25, 2009.
  69. ^ Peters, Mark (July 16, 2014). "Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn's Re-Election Hampered by Criminal Investigation". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  70. ^ Long, Rick (October 9, 2014). "Emails reveal politics part of troubled Quinn grant program". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  71. ^ "Governor Quinn, clean house". Chicago Tribune. September 15, 2014. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  72. ^ Garcia, Monique (October 22, 2014). "Federal judge deals Quinn ethics blow on IDOT patronage hiring". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  73. ^ . Environmental Defenders of McHenry County. January 29, 2010. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved September 10, 2010.
  74. ^ "Governor Pat Quinn signs green bills into law at 2009 Sustainable University Symposium" (Press release). Palos Hills: Illinois Government News Network. July 24, 2009. Retrieved November 27, 2014.
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  76. ^ "YouTube – The Green Governor – Pat Quinn". Sierra Club IL PAC. January 29, 2010. Retrieved September 10, 2010.
  77. ^ "Governor Quinn endorsed by Illinois Sierra Club". FOX2now.com. September 20, 2014. Retrieved May 30, 2016.
  78. ^ "Illinois Abolishes Death Penalty, Clears Death Row". NPR. March 9, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
  79. ^ "Illinois Abolishes Death Penalty". Democracy Now!. March 10, 2011. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
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  81. ^ ENews Park Forest. . ENews Park Forest. Archived from the original on September 15, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
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Further reading edit

  • Barone, Michael, and Chuck McCutcheon, The Almanac of American Politics: 2012 (2011) pp 512–14

External links edit

  • official Illinois government site
  • Pat Quinn campaign website
  • Pat Quinn at Curlie
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of Illinois
1991–1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of Illinois
2003–2009
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Illinois
2009–2015
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Treasurer of Illinois
1990
Succeeded by
Nancy Drew Sheehan
Democratic nominee for Secretary of State of Illinois
1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Mary Lou Kearns
Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois
2002, 2006
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Illinois
2010, 2014
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former Governor Order of precedence of the United States Succeeded byas Former Governor

quinn, politician, patrick, joseph, quinn, born, december, 1948, american, politician, served, 41st, governor, illinois, from, 2009, 2015, democrat, quinn, began, career, activist, founding, coalition, political, honesty, elected, lieutenant, governor, 2002, s. Patrick Joseph Quinn Jr born December 16 1948 is an American politician who served as the 41st governor of Illinois from 2009 to 2015 A Democrat Quinn began his career as an activist by founding the Coalition for Political Honesty 1 He was elected lieutenant governor in 2002 and served under governor Rod Blagojevich After Blagojevich was impeached and removed from office in 2009 Quinn assumed the governorship He secured a full term in office in the 2010 gubernatorial election but later lost his bid for a second term in the 2014 gubernatorial election to his opponent Bruce Rauner Pat Quinn41st Governor of IllinoisIn office January 29 2009 January 12 2015LieutenantVacant 2009 2011 Sheila Simon 2011 2015 Preceded byRod BlagojevichSucceeded byBruce Rauner45th Lieutenant Governor of IllinoisIn office January 13 2003 January 29 2009GovernorRod BlagojevichPreceded byCorinne WoodSucceeded bySheila Simon70th Treasurer of IllinoisIn office January 14 1991 January 9 1995GovernorJim EdgarPreceded byJerome CosentinoSucceeded byJudy Baar TopinkaCommissioner of the Cook County Board of AppealsIn office 1982 1986Personal detailsBornPatrick Joseph Quinn Jr 1948 12 16 December 16 1948 age 74 Chicago Illinois U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseJulie Hancock m 1982 div 1986 wbr Children2Residence s Chicago IllinoisEducationGeorgetown University BS Northwestern University JD SignatureBorn in Chicago Illinois Quinn is a graduate of Georgetown University and Northwestern University School of Law Quinn began his career as a tax attorney in private practice before working as an aide to then Illinois Governor Dan Walker He was elected to one term as a commissioner on the Cook County Board of Appeals serving from 1982 to 1986 he later served as revenue director in the administration of Chicago Mayor Harold Washington Quinn was elected Treasurer of Illinois in 1990 and served one term In Illinois 2002 gubernatorial election Quinn won the Democratic nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois in the primary and was paired with then U S Representative Rod Blagojevich in the general election He was sworn into office as lieutenant governor in 2003 Both Quinn and Blagojevich were reelected in 2006 Quinn assumed the governorship on January 29 2009 after Governor Blagojevich was impeached and removed from office on corruption charges Quinn was narrowly elected to a full term in office in the 2010 defeating Republican State Senator Bill Brady by a margin of less than 1 out of about 3 5 million votes cast Quinn was narrowly defeated in 2014 by Republican candidate Bruce Rauner 2 Quinn unsuccessfully ran in the Democratic primary for Attorney General of Illinois in 2018 3 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political activism 3 Early political career 3 1 State Treasurer 3 2 U S Senate campaign 3 3 1998 lieutenant gubernatorial campaign 3 4 Lieutenant governor 4 Governor of Illinois 4 1 Succession and elections 4 1 1 2010 gubernatorial election 4 1 2 2014 gubernatorial election 4 2 Governorship 4 2 1 Budget debt and taxes 4 2 2 Ethics reform and corruption allegations 4 2 3 Environment and energy 4 2 4 Social issues 5 Post gubernatorial activities 6 Electoral history 6 1 For Illinois Attorney General 6 2 As Governor of Illinois with Lt Governor 6 2 1 2014 6 2 2 2010 6 3 As Lt Governor with Governor 6 4 For Illinois Secretary of State 6 5 As state treasurer 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life and education editQuinn was born in 1948 in Chicago His family moved to the suburb of Hinsdale Illinois when he was a child The son of Eileen Prindiville a school secretary and Patrick Joseph Quinn a public relations official for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago 4 5 6 7 his grandparents were Irish He was reared a Catholic and attended the local Catholic elementary school St Isaac Jogues 8 He graduated in 1967 from Fenwick High School a Catholic school in Oak Park Illinois 9 while at Fenwick Quinn was the cross country team captain and sports editor of the school newspaper Quinn went on to graduate from Georgetown University in 1971 with a bachelor s degree from the Edmund A Walsh School of Foreign Service where he was a student of Professor Jan Karski 10 and a sports editor for The Hoya 11 After taking a few years off from education he earned a Juris Doctor degree from Northwestern University School of Law in 1980 12 In 1982 Quinn married Julie Ann Hancock The marriage produced two sons Davey Quinn and Patrick Quinn IV before the couple s 1986 divorce 13 From 1976 through 1978 he worked as an economist for the company Coilcraft 14 Political activism editBefore running for public office Quinn was involved in political action serving as an aide to Governor Daniel Walker from 1973 through 1975 9 14 He was first put on the political map in the late 1970s by leading a petition to amend the 1970 Illinois Constitution with the Illinois Initiative This amendment was intended to increase the power of public referendums in the political process and recalls for public officials 9 The petition drive was successful but the Illinois Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the Illinois Initiative was an unconstitutional constitutional amendment and thus never was presented to voters 15 Quinn drew more attention to his causes by holding press conferences on Sundays seen as a slow news day 9 While still in law school Quinn scored his first political success in 1980 earning a reputation as a reformer on the Illinois political scene Through his organization The Coalition for Political Honesty he initiated and led the statewide campaign for the Cutback Amendment to the Illinois Constitution ultimately reducing the size of the Illinois House of Representatives from 177 to 118 members 15 16 Early political career editIn 1982 Quinn was elected as commissioner of the Cook County Board of Appeals now known as the Cook County Board of Review 9 During his time on the board Quinn was instrumental in the creation of the Citizens Utility Board a consumer watchdog organization 14 Quinn did not seek re election to the Cook County Board of Tax Appeals in 1986 instead opting to run an unsuccessful campaign for the Democratic nomination for Illinois State Treasurer losing to Jerome Cosentino After this defeat Quinn briefly served in the administration of Chicago Mayor Harold Washington as Revenue Director in 1987 14 17 18 Quinn also served on the local school council of Sayre Magnet School on Chicago s West Side 19 State Treasurer edit Quinn s bid for office was successful in the 1990 election for Illinois Treasurer defeating Peg McDonnell Breslin in the Democratic primary and Greg Baise in the general election 20 21 Quinn campaigned as a populist reformer in opposition to big government 19 He pledged during his campaign that he would seek to transform the office into a consumer advocate style position 19 As a candidate he refused to take campaign contributions from banking officials 19 He also pledged as a candidate to modernize the office and maximize returns on state deposits through use of electronic fund transfers and through expanding linked deposit programs 19 He released an Invest in Illinois plan which proposed competitive bidding from financial institutions wanting to be state depositories 19 He also promised that he would not deposit or invest assets used to pay employee retirement benefits in junk bonds 19 He also pledged to implement a professional code of ethics for the office s employees 19 He served in the position of Illinois Treasurer from 1991 to 1995 During this period he was publicly critical of Illinois Secretary of State and future governor George Ryan Specifically he drew attention to special vanity license plates that Ryan s office provided for cronies and the politically connected This rivalry led Quinn to unsuccessfully challenge Ryan in the 1994 general election for Secretary of State winning the Democratic primary but losing in the general 22 23 U S Senate campaign edit Main article 1996 United States Senate election in Illinois Democratic primary Quinn then took his aspirations to the national stage When United States Senator Paul Simon chose not to seek re election in 1996 Quinn entered the race However Dick Durbin won the Democratic primary and eventually the Senate seat 24 1998 lieutenant gubernatorial campaign edit Main article 1998 Illinois gubernatorial election Lieutenant governor Quinn sought the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in 1998 but was narrowly defeated by Mary Lou Kearns Quinn did not initially accept the count and charged fraud but several weeks after the election he declined to ask the Illinois Supreme Court for a recount and endorsed Kearns In 1998 Quinn protested an increase in state legislators salaries by urging citizens to send tea bags to the governor Jim Edgar The tactic was a reference to the Boston Tea Party 25 As lieutenant governor he would later repeat this tactic in 2006 urging consumers to include a tea bag when paying their electricity bills to protest rate hikes by Commonwealth Edison 26 Lieutenant governor edit nbsp Quinn as lieutenant governor in 2006Quinn won the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in March 2002 and subsequently won the general election on the Democratic ticket alongside gubernatorial nominee Rod Blagojevich In Illinois candidates for lieutenant governor and governor at that time ran in separate primary elections but were conjoined as a single ticket for the general election 9 This same ticket won re election in 2006 where Quinn was unopposed in the primary 15 While Lieutenant Governor according to his official biography his priorities were consumer advocacy environmental protection health care broadband deployment and veterans affairs 27 On December 14 2008 when Quinn was asked about his relationship with Blagojevich he said Well he s a bit isolated I tried to talk to the Governor but the last time I spoke to him was in August of 2007 I think one of the problems is the Governor did sort of seal himself off from all the statewide officials Attorney General Madigan and myself and many others 28 Blagojevich had announced in 2006 that Quinn was not to be considered part of his administration 29 Governor of Illinois editSuccession and elections edit On January 29 2009 Rod Blagojevich was removed from office by a vote of 59 0 by the Illinois State Senate 30 Quinn became Governor of Illinois 31 2010 gubernatorial election edit Main article 2010 Illinois gubernatorial election In the Democratic primary for governor in 2010 Quinn defeated State Comptroller Daniel Hynes with 50 4 of the vote 32 On March 27 2010 Illinois Democratic leaders selected Sheila Simon to replace Scott Lee Cohen on the ballot after Cohen won the February 2010 Democratic primary to be Illinois Lieutenant Governor but later withdrew amid controversies involving his personal life 33 In the general election Quinn s campaign aired television ads produced by Joe Slade White that repeatedly asked the question of his opponent Who is this guy 34 Ben Nuckels was the general election Campaign Manager and was named a Rising Star of Politics by Campaigns amp Elections magazine for his efforts with Quinn 35 Quinn won the general election on November 2 2010 by a narrow margin against Republican candidate Bill Brady 36 Quinn s victory was named by RealClearPolitics com as the No 5 General Election upset in the country Politico said it was the 7th closest gubernatorial in American history 37 2014 gubernatorial election edit Main article 2014 Illinois gubernatorial election Quinn declared a run for re election for 2014 38 In the summer of 2013 former White House Chief of Staff and former United States Secretary of Commerce William M Daley declared a run for governor in the Democratic Primary against Quinn but later dropped out 39 40 Quinn chose Paul Vallas the former Chicago Public Schools CEO as his running mate 41 Quinn was challenged in the Democratic Primary by Tio Hardiman the former director of CeaseFire but won 72 28 and faced Republican businessman Bruce Rauner for the general election The majority of major Illinois newspapers endorsed Rauner 42 but Quinn was endorsed by the Chicago Defender 43 the Rockford Register Star 44 and The Southern Illinoisan 45 Quinn was defeated by Rauner in the general election 50 46 He lost every county except Cook County His term as governor ended on January 12 2015 Governorship edit As governor Quinn faced a state with a reputation for corruption the two previous governors both went to federal prison and after two years polls showed Quinn himself was the Nation s most unpopular governor 46 The main issue was a fiscal crisis in meeting the state s budget and its long term debt as the national economic slump continued and Illinois did poorly in terms of creating jobs Quinn spoke often to the public and met regularly with state leaders in stark contrast to Rod Blagojevich s seclusion from others On August 20 2013 Quinn signed a bill into law that raised the rural interstate speed limit in Illinois to 70 mph It was previously 65 mph The bill also raised the speed limit on the Illinois Toll Road The law became effective at midnight January 1 2014 Budget debt and taxes edit Quinn announced several belt tightening programs to help curb the state deficit In July 2009 Quinn signed a 29 billion capital bill to provide construction and repair funds for Illinois roads mass transit schools and other public works projects The capital bill known as Illinois Jobs Now was the first since Governor George H Ryan s Illinois FIRST plan which was enacted in the late 1990s 47 On July 7 2009 he for the second time in a week vetoed a budget bill calling it out of balance his plan being to more significantly fix the budget gap in Illinois 48 In March 2009 Quinn called for a 1 5 percentage point increase in the personal income tax rate To help offset the increased rate he also sought to triple the amount shielded from taxation or the personal exemption from 2 000 per person to 6 000 49 However the bill that eventually passed increased the personal income tax by 2 With the state budget deficit projected to hit 15 billion in 2011 the legislature in early 2011 raised the personal income tax from 3 to 5 and the corporation profits tax 4 8 to 7 Governor Quinn s office projected the new taxes will generate 6 8 billion a year enough to balance the annual budget and begin reducing the state s backlog of about 8 5 billion in unpaid bills 50 A report from the Civic Federation in September 2011 projected a 8 3 billion deficit to end the budget year 51 nbsp Governor Quinn at the Green expo in 2009After three years of tax increases for workers and businesses ending with an increase in corporate taxes in 2011 from 5 to 7 the national recession left the economy in trouble During an annual budget address on February 22 2012 to the Illinois Legislature Quinn warned that the state s financial system was nearing collapse 52 53 The Associated Press reported that Quinn feared Illinois was on the verge of a financial meltdown because of pension systems eating up every new dollar and health care costs climbing through the roof 54 According to the Civic Federation Illinois is only able to remain solvent by not paying its bills on time 53 Quinn advocated Medicaid and healthcare cuts totaling 1 6 billion in 2012 critics including Democratic State Representative Mary E Flowers stated the cuts would remove hundreds of thousands of the poor and elderly from public health programs 55 The unprecedented cuts were too small to resolve the long term issue according to rating agencies that downgraded Illinois to the lowest credit rating of any US state in 2012 As of November 2012 unpaid pension obligations totaled 85 billion with a backlog of 8 billion 56 In an effort to reduce the state s financial obligations in November 2012 Quinn cancelled contracts with the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees Union officials contended that Quinn wanted concessions so deep that they are an insult to every state employee while the administration contended that the state is paying salaries and benefits at levels that exceed the salaries and benefits of other unionized state workers across the country 56 As of December 2012 Illinois had the fifth highest unemployment rate in the United States and by March 2013 Illinois public employee pension liability reached 100 billion 57 58 Pat Quinn has been a major supporter of the controversial Illiana Expressway 59 In 2009 Quinn signed into law the Video Gaming Act which legalized the use of video gambling machines in Illinois Quinn had previously denounced video gambling as a bad bet Quinn said the legislation was necessary to make up revenue due to the recession A 2019 ProPublica investigation found that Illinois gambling regulators were underfunded and understaffed and the gambling failed to meet projected revenues for the state s public coffers 60 Ethics reform and corruption allegations edit On January 5 2009 Quinn appointed Patrick M Collins to chair the Illinois Reform Commission which was tasked with making recommendations for ethical reform for Illinois government 61 62 On February 20 2009 Quinn called for the resignation of US Senator Roland Burris the man appointed to the United States Senate by Blagojevich to fill the vacant seat created by the resignation of Barack Obama He changed his position however following pressure from prominent African Americans who threatened electoral repercussions 63 On March 3 2009 the Associated Press reported that Quinn had paid his own expenses many times as lieutenant governor contradicting Blagojevich s accusations against Quinn 64 65 As a rule he either paid his own way or stayed at cut rate hotels such as Super 8 and never charged the state for his meals 65 66 In June 2009 Quinn launched a panel chaired by Abner Mikva to investigate unethical practices at the University of Illinois amid fears that a prior investigation would be ineffective in instituting necessary reforms The panel was charged with searching the admissions practices amid reports that the public university was a victim of corruption 67 The panel found evidence of favoritism and its investigation culminated in the resignation of all but two University trustees 68 In Spring 2014 federal prosecutors and the Illinois Legislative Audit Commission launched an investigation into Quinn s 55 million Neighborhood Recovery Initiative a program launched weeks before 2010 election 69 70 On October 22 a federal judge appointed an independent monitor to oversee hiring at the Illinois Department of Transportation This followed a three year investigation by the Illinois executive inspector general that uncovered politically motivated hiring at IDOT which started under Gov Blagojevich 71 72 Environment and energy edit nbsp Quinn in May 2010 holding up a bill he signed into law moments before 96th General Assembly SB 3429 which requires state government to conduct an energy audit of buildings that will be used for future energy efficiency standards Quinn won generally high praise for his leadership on environmental issues going back at least as far as when he was lieutenant governor where he helped develop annual statewide conferences on green building created a state day to celebrate and defend rivers 73 and promoted measures such as rain gardens for water conservation As governor Quinn helped pass measures on solar and wind energy 74 including sourcing electricity for the state capitol from wind power and helped secure funding for high speed rail in the midwest corridor As Governor and Lt Governor Quinn Co Chaired the Illinois Green Government Council a council that focused on greening state government and reducing waste The Illinois Green Government Council produced public annual sustainability reports tracking overall state government energy usage fuel usage water usage and waste 75 In 2010 and 2014 the Sierra Club Illinois s largest environmental group endorsed Quinn calling him The Green Governor 76 77 Quinn faced protests and strong opposition from environmentalists after his support for a controversial law to regulate and launch fracking Social issues edit On March 9 2011 Quinn signed the bill which abolished the death penalty in Illinois 78 On signing the bill Quinn stated It is impossible to create a perfect system one that is free of all mistakes free of all discrimination with respect to race or economic circumstance or geography To have a consistent perfect death penalty system I have concluded after looking at everything I ve been given that that s impossible in our state I think it s the right and just thing to abolish the death penalty 79 In an interview with The New York Times Quinn attributed his decision to the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin who had argued until the end of his life for a consistent ethic of life that included opposing capital punishment To date capital punishment is still outlawed in Illinois 80 On May 17 2012 Quinn appointed Brandon Bodor to be Executive Director of the Serve Illinois Commission On September 11 2012 the two announced that the Corporation for National and Community Service CNCS had awarded 8 4 million to enable 1 200 volunteers in 29 AmeriCorps programs to better serve Illinois communities 81 Quinn is an advocate for gun control supporting an assault weapons ban high capacity magazine ban and universal background checks for Illinois 82 Quinn has also been known for criticizing concealed carry legislation in Illinois which would allow a person to have a concealed handgun on their person in public and the National Rifle Association of America 83 Despite this opposition the Illinois General Assembly legalized concealed carry in the state on July 9 2013 overriding Quinn s veto This made Illinois the last state in the U S to enact this type of legislation 84 In Quinn s 2013 State of the State address he declared his commitment to the legalization of same sex marriage 85 After a months long battle in the legislature Quinn signed the Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act into law 86 on November 20 2013 before a crowd of thousands making Illinois the 16th state in the nation to legalize same sex marriage 87 He had previously signed a bill legalizing civil unions on January 31 2011 88 Post gubernatorial activities edit nbsp Quinn at the 2018 Chicago Pride Parade June 2018Quinn has kept a low profile since leaving office volunteering for causes like veterans affairs and consumer protection 89 Quinn has been critical of his successor Bruce Rauner calling him anti worker and dishonest He has stated that he is interested in grassroots petitions 90 On June 12 2016 Quinn announced a new petition drive called Take Charge Chicago to put a binding referendum on the Chicago ballot to place a two term limit on the Mayor of Chicago and create a new elected position called the Consumer Advocate 91 92 As of mid 2017 that is still ongoing On October 27 2017 Quinn announced he would run for Illinois Attorney General in the 2018 election 3 Quinn was generally regarded as the most well known candidate in the race 93 however he narrowly lost the nomination to State Senator Kwame Raoul on March 20 2018 For the 2020 election cycle Quinn championed a citizens initiated ballot item which would ask voters in Evanston whether the city should adopt a system under which binding citizen initiated referendums to create city ordinances would be allowed This ballot question was rejected by the city s election board a decision subsequently upheld in the Circuit Court of Cook County and the Illinois Appeals Court 94 95 During the 2023 Chicago mayoral election Quinn flirted with the idea of running for Chicago mayor going as far as collecting signatures to appear on the ballot 96 However he declined to run in the election and subsequently endorsed U S Representative Chuy Garcia s candidacy in the first round of voting 97 and then his former running mate Paul Vallas in the run off 98 Electoral history editFor Illinois Attorney General edit Democratic primary results 2018 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Kwame Raoul 374 667 30 2Democratic Pat Quinn 340 163 27 4Democratic Sharon Fairley 156 070 12 6Democratic Nancy Rotering 115 974 9 3Democratic Scott Drury 98 246 7 9Democratic Jesse Ruiz 67 706 5 5Democratic Renato Mariotti 49 891 4 0Democratic Aaron Goldstein 37 987 3 1Total votes 1 159 701 100As Governor of Illinois with Lt Governor edit 2014 edit Illinois gubernatorial election 2014 99 Party Candidate Votes Republican Bruce Rauner Evelyn Sanguinetti 1 823 627 50 27Democratic Pat Quinn Paul Vallas Incumbent 1 681 343 46 35Libertarian Chad Grimm Alex Cummings 121 534 3 35Write In Various candidates 1 186 0 03Majority 142 284 3 92 Total votes 3 627 690 100Republican gain from DemocraticDemocratic primary results 100 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Pat Quinn Incumbent 321 818 71 94Democratic Tio Hardiman 125 500 28 06Total votes 447 318 1002010 edit Illinois gubernatorial election 2010 101 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Pat Quinn Incumbent 1 745 219 46 79 3 00 Republican Bill Brady 1 713 385 45 94 6 68 Independent Scott Lee Cohen 135 705 3 64 Green Rich Whitney 100 756 2 70 7 66 Libertarian Lex Green 34 681 0 93 Majority 31 834 0 85 9 68 Turnout 3 729 989Democratic hold SwingDemocratic primary results 102 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Pat Quinn Incumbent 462 049 50 46Democratic Dan Hynes 453 677 49 54Total votes 915 726 100 00As Lt Governor with Governor edit 2006 Election for Governor Lieutenant Governor of Illinois 103 Rod Blagojevich Pat Quinn D inc 49 79 Judy Baar Topinka Joe Birkett R 39 26 Rich Whitney Julie Samuels Green 10 36 citation needed 2002 Election for Governor Lieutenant Governor Rod Blagojevich Pat Quinn D 52 Jim Ryan Carl Hawkinson R 45 For Illinois Secretary of State edit 1994 Illinois Secretary of State George Ryan R inc 20 61 5 Pat Quinn D 38 5 As state treasurer edit 1990 Illinois Treasurer 20 Pat Quinn D 55 7 Greg Baise R 44 3 References edit Pat Quinn The Man Politicians Love to Hate Illinois Times Retrieved March 20 2015 Bruce Rauner ousts Illinois Gov Pat Quinn Politico com November 4 2014 Retrieved November 5 2014 a b Sneed Michael October 27 2017 SNEED EXCLUSIVE Ex Gov Pat Quinn to run for state attorney general Chicago Sun Times Retrieved October 27 2017 Michael Barone and Chuck McCutcheon The Almanac of American Politics 2012 2011 p 512 Pat Quinn s mom shows toughness love on the campaign trail Daily Herald November 6 2010 Death Notice PATRICK J QUINN SR Chicago Tribune February 26 2008 Pat Quinn Illinois Issues A Publication of the University of Illinois at Springfield UIS uis edu Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved November 5 2014 Michael Barone and Chuck McCutcheon The Almanac of American Politics 2012 2011 p 512 a b c d e f Quinn Would Face 2 Billion Budget Gap as Blagojevich Successor Bloomberg News December 15 2008 Retrieved December 15 2008 Polish American Awareness Foundation Inc Polish American Awareness Foundation Inc Paafonline org Archived from the original on January 13 2012 Retrieved November 4 2011 Mimms Sarah January 30 2009 GU Alum Replaces Impeached Blagojevich The Hoya Retrieved November 17 2011 Fenwick High School Pat Quinn 1967 Archived from the original on February 14 2011 Carol Felsenthal Does Pat Quinn Have a Personal Life Chicago magazine Retrieved May 30 2016 a b c d Berkman Harvey August 1990 Electing Illinois other executives Illinois Issues Retrieved October 5 2020 a b c Political Base Pat Quinn Issues Money Videos Stepanek Marcia February 8 1980 Pat Quinn a man politicians love to hate Illinois Periodicals Online Retrieved January 30 2009 Hawthorne Michael December 10 2008 Pat Quinn waiting in the wings Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 30 2009 Biographical information on Quinn WTOP com Associated Press January 29 2009 Retrieved January 30 2009 permanent dead link a b c d e f g h Guy Sandra October 14 1990 Illinois election 1990 Candidate profiles Illinois state nwitimes com The Times of Northwest Indiana a b c Illinois Blue Book Watson Angie April 1990 Election 1990 Quinn prevails incumbents upset Illinois Issues Vol 15 no 4 Springfield Illinois Sangamon State University p 9 Retrieved August 10 2017 State of Illinois official vote cast at the primary election held on Illinois State Board of Elections 1966 Retrieved April 7 2020 State of Illinois official vote cast at the general election Illinois State Board of Elections 1978 Retrieved April 7 2020 Neal Steve December 12 1995 Outsider Quinn Vows to Look Out for the Little Guy Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on October 23 2012 Retrieved January 30 2009 Selvam Ashok April 14 2009 Quinn tackles income tax plan gay marriage during Harper visit Daily Herald retrieved February 2 2010 Duncanson Jon September 18 2006 Quinn Wants Boston Tea Party Revolt Against ComEd CBS Broadcasting Inc Retrieved February 1 2010 dead link Lt Governor Pat Quinn Standing Up for Illinois November 7 2006 Retrieved August 29 2010 Gregory David December 14 2008 Meet the Press transcript for Dec 14 2008 NBC News Retrieved January 30 2009 Burton Cheryl December 15 2008 Quinn alters his plan for governor WLS TV Retrieved January 30 2009 Long Ray Rick Pearson January 30 2009 Impeached Illinois Gov Rod Blagojevich has been removed from office Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 8 2009 Barone and McCutcheon The Almanac of American Politics 2012 2011 p 513 Chicago Tribune Election Results Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 5 2010 Democrats pick Simon as Quinn s running mate Chicago Tribune March 27 2010 Quinn Brady neck and neck in new Tribune poll Chicago Tribune September 30 2010 Campaigns amp Elections Names 2011 Class of Rising Stars Campaigns amp Elections Magazine June 6 2011 Archived from the original on July 30 2012 Pearson Rick Long Ray November 5 2010 Republican Bill Brady concedes governor s race to Quinn Chicago Tribune Retrieved November 5 2010 Top 10 Upsets of 2010 5 IL Gov Pat Quinn Hangs On RealClearPolitics Retrieved November 4 2011 Quinn Running Again Because I Think I m Doing A Good Job NBC Chicago November 29 2012 Retrieved November 30 2014 Bill Daley jumps 100 percent in Illinois governor race Chicago Sun Times June 10 2013 Archived from the original on June 20 2013 Retrieved November 30 2014 Bill Daley drops bid for governor Chicago Tribune September 16 2013 Retrieved November 30 2014 Burnett Sara Quinn picks Paul Vallas as 2014 running mate Pantagraph Associated Press Retrieved November 30 2014 Merda Chad October 14 2014 Who s Winning the Endorsement Battle in Illinois Archived November 11 2014 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Sun Times Retrieved November 30 2014 October 27 2014 The Quintessential Choice for Governor The Chicago Defender Endorses Pat Quinn for Governor Archived December 1 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Chicago Defender Retrieved November 30 2014 October 26 2014 Our View In Illinois Governor s Race Pat Quinn is Right Pick for Rockford Rockford Register Star Retrieved November 30 2014 October 29 2014 Governor The Devil You Know The Southern Illinoisian Retrieved November 30 2014 Pat Quinn Illinois Governor Polls As Nation s Least Popular Governor Huffington Post November 30 2012 Retrieved March 16 2013 Ferkenhoff Eric December 16 2008 Pat Quinn The Man Who Would Replace Blagojevich Time Archived from the original on December 17 2008 Retrieved July 8 2009 Garcia Monique July 8 2009 Gov Quinn shifts gears on cutbacks and vetoes budget Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 8 2008 Long Ray Ashley Rueff March 13 2009 Illinois income tax rate may rise by 50 Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 22 2010 Ill Gov Quinn signs major tax increase into law Associated Press January 13 2011 Garcia Monique September 26 2011 Illinois budget deficit to hit 8 billion despite tax increase Chicago Tribune Retrieved September 27 2011 Quinn s speech vague on major Illinois budget problems Associated Press Retrieved February 22 2012 a b Hal Weitzman Nicole Bullock March 5 2012 Financial Times Financial Times Retrieved March 16 2013 Christopher Wills Quinn says hello to reality in Illinois Associated Press Feb 23 2012 Ray Long and Alissa Groeninger May 25 2012 Illinois Legislature passes 1 6 billion in Medicaid cuts Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 16 2013 a b The Associated Press November 20 2012 Quinn Terminates Contract With State s Largest Worker Union CBS Chicago Retrieved March 16 2013 Frum David Welcome to Botswana The Daily Beast Newsweek Retrieved March 16 2013 Goudie Chuck Quinn faces daunting State of State as Illinois struggles WLS TV ABC Retrieved March 16 2013 Quinn underlines support for Illiana Expressway Grotto Jason Kambhampati Sandhya January 16 2019 Illinois Bet on Video Gambling and Lost ProPublica Retrieved January 20 2019 Illinois Ethics Reform Panel Releases Report of Recommendations Chicago Tribune April 29 2009 found at Chicago Tribune website Retrieved May 4 2011 Illinois Reform Commission Mission Reformillinoisnow org Retrieved November 4 2011 Long Ray Ashley Rueff April 6 2009 Burris election off the table Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 8 2009 Ill Gov Quinn mostly paid his own way USA Today March 3 2009 at 3A found at USA Today website Retrieved March 4 2009 a b John O Connor AP review shows new Ill governor often paid own travel expenses instead of charging taxpayers AP and Chicago Tribune March 3 2009 found at Chicago Tribune website Retrieved March 4 2009 dead link Report Quinn eschewed tax dollars for meals travel ABC Affiliate WLS TV Tuesday March 3 2009 found at ABC website Retrieved March 4 2009 Malone Tara Stacy St Clair June 11 2009 University of Illinois clout Gov Pat Quinn gives clout list panel its marching orders Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 8 2009 Report amp Recommendations PDF State of Illinois Admissions Review Commission August 7 2009 Retrieved October 25 2009 Peters Mark July 16 2014 Illinois Gov Pat Quinn s Re Election Hampered by Criminal Investigation Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 23 2014 Long Rick October 9 2014 Emails reveal politics part of troubled Quinn grant program Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 23 2014 Governor Quinn clean house Chicago Tribune September 15 2014 Retrieved October 23 2014 Garcia Monique October 22 2014 Federal judge deals Quinn ethics blow on IDOT patronage hiring Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 23 2014 It s Our River Day Environmental Defenders of McHenry County January 29 2010 Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved September 10 2010 Governor Pat Quinn signs green bills into law at 2009 Sustainable University Symposium Press release Palos Hills Illinois Government News Network July 24 2009 Retrieved November 27 2014 Green illinois gov Archived from the original on March 28 2016 Retrieved July 8 2017 YouTube The Green Governor Pat Quinn Sierra Club IL PAC January 29 2010 Retrieved September 10 2010 Governor Quinn endorsed by Illinois Sierra Club FOX2now com September 20 2014 Retrieved May 30 2016 Illinois Abolishes Death Penalty Clears Death Row NPR March 9 2011 Retrieved March 9 2011 Illinois Abolishes Death Penalty Democracy Now March 10 2011 Retrieved March 10 2011 Freedman Samuel G March 25 2011 The Death Penalty and Cardinal Bernardin On Religion The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 17 2020 Retrieved November 26 2019 subscription required ENews Park Forest Governor Quinn And Serve Illinois Commission Announce 8 4 Million Federal Grant For AmeriCorps Programs ENews Park Forest Archived from the original on September 15 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 Pat Quinn on Gun Control On The Issues Retrieved December 15 2014 Quinn says he s ready for showdown on concealed carry Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on July 10 2013 Retrieved December 15 2014 Illinois enacts nation s final concealed gun law USA Today Archived from the original on July 10 2013 Retrieved July 23 2015 Governor Quinn Delivers 2013 State of the State Address Press release Springfield Illinois Illinois Government News Network February 6 2013 Archived from the original on February 19 2013 Retrieved March 25 2015 Illinois governor signs same sex marriage into law CBS News Retrieved November 22 2013 Garcia Monique November 20 2013 Quinn signs Illinois gay marriage bill Chicago Tribune Retrieved November 22 2013 Illinois civil unions signed into law Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 23 2015 Bazer Mark May 6 2016 Pat Quinn The Interview Show Retrieved May 29 2016 Fortino Ellyn January 14 2016 Quinn Slams Rauner Over Ongoing Budget Impasse Progress Illinois Retrieved July 31 2016 Hinz Greg June 12 2016 Quinn pushes referendum to term limit Emanuel Crain s Chicago Business Retrieved October 26 2017 Dietrich Matt Pat Quinn gets back into action with Chicago term limits elected Consumer Advocate Push Reboot Illinois Archived from the original on June 15 2016 Retrieved June 16 2016 Meet the 8 Democrats hoping to replace Lisa Madigan as attorney general WGN TV March 6 2018 Retrieved March 7 2018 Bookwalter Genevieve January 16 2020 Binding referendum initiative backed by former Gov Pat Quinn struck down by Evanston electoral board chicagotribune com Chicago Tribune Retrieved May 29 2020 Smith Bill March 16 2020 Appeals court upholds objections to referendum Evanston Now Retrieved May 29 2020 Spielman Fran November 17 2022 Former Gov Pat Quinn decides to skip mayor s race Chicago Sun Times Retrieved November 17 2022 Former Illinois Gov Pat Quinn endorses Garcia for mayor Chicago Sun Times February 8 2023 Quinn endorsing Vallas Politico March 22 2023 Retrieved March 22 2023 November 4 2014 General election Official results PDF Illinois Secretary of State Archived from the original PDF on January 28 2015 Retrieved December 8 2014 Official Illinois State Board of Elections Results Archived January 28 2015 at the Wayback Machine General Election of November 2 2010 PDF Illinois State Board of Elections Archived from the original PDF on December 27 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 Ballots Cast primary election Elections illinois gov Archived from the original on August 14 2014 Retrieved October 14 2013 2007 2008 Illinois Blue Book PDF Illinois General Election November 7 2006 Summary of General Vote page 466 Office of Jesse White Illinois Secretary of State 2007 2008 Archived from the original PDF on June 15 2011 Retrieved February 7 2010 Further reading editBarone Michael and Chuck McCutcheon The Almanac of American Politics 2012 2011 pp 512 14External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pat Quinn Illinois Governor Pat Quinn official Illinois government site Pat Quinn campaign website Pat Quinn for Governor Pat Quinn at Curlie Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byJerome Cosentino Treasurer of Illinois1991 1995 Succeeded byJudy TopinkaPreceded byCorinne Wood Lieutenant Governor of Illinois2003 2009 Succeeded bySheila SimonPreceded byRod Blagojevich Governor of Illinois2009 2015 Succeeded byBruce RaunerParty political officesPreceded byJerome Cosentino Democratic nominee for Treasurer of Illinois1990 Succeeded byNancy Drew SheehanDemocratic nominee for Secretary of State of Illinois1994 Succeeded byJesse WhitePreceded byMary Lou Kearns Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois2002 2006 Succeeded bySheila SimonPreceded byRod Blagojevich Democratic nominee for Governor of Illinois2010 2014 Succeeded byJ B PritzkerU S order of precedence ceremonial Preceded byRod Blagojevichas Former Governor Order of precedence of the United States Succeeded byBruce Rauneras Former Governor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pat Quinn politician amp oldid 1188482059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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