Quinn: Illinois lt. governor hopefuls should speak up

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With family members at his side, Democratic nominee for Lt. Governor, Scott Cohen, tries to keep his composure during an emotional in Chicago, Ill., Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010. Cohen dropped out of the race Sunday night, less than a week after winning the nomination, amid a political uproar about his past. (AP Photo/The Chicago Sun-Times, Tom Cruze)
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CHICAGO (AP) — Democrats in Illinois are getting a political do-over: the chance to pick a new lieutenant governor nominee themselves now that the primary winner dropped out of the race because of revelations about his checkered past.

Gov. Pat Quinn has the rare opportunity to help choose his running mate, but refused to say Monday who was on his short list of potential partners.

The politicking has begun in earnest, though, among would-be contenders who want a chance in November at the state's No. 2 job. The spot opened up when Scott Lee Cohen announced Sunday that he would leave the ticket over fears that he could cost Democrats the governor's race. Nominees for governor and lieutenant governor are chosen separately in the primary, but are linked together on the November ballot.

"I want to run with somebody who's qualified to be governor, who has a record of public service, someone who is able to speak to ordinary, everyday people in plain language about the importance of the economy and someone who also stands up for the progressive values of the Democratic party," Quinn told reporters.

Democrats are in a position to strengthen their ticket after Cohen bowed to pressure to get out of the race. It became widely known after his Feb. 2 primary victory that he had been accused of abusing his ex-wife and holding a knife to the throat of a former girlfriend, who had been charged with prostitution. Cohen also had admitted to past steroid use.

The revelations came as Illinois was starting to move on from the scandals of ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

"For the good of the people of the state of Illinois and the Democratic Party, I will resign," Cohen announced Sunday during a Super Bowl halftime news conference at a Chicago bar.

Democrats had feared Cohen would tank Quinn's chances in November, possibly dragging down the entire Democratic ticket in the state and even allowing Republicans to capture President Barack Obama's former Senate seat. Quinn, who inherited the governor's job after Blagojevich's ouster, was already vulnerable after a narrow primary win and a tough Republican challenge in the fall.

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