A pivotal test of leadership

Quinn will face major challenges in coming weeks

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In this file photo taken Nov. 4, 2010 in Chicago, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn thanks voters at Manny’s Deli, two days after the general election in which he defeated Republican challenger Bill Brady. After keeping a low public profile leading up to the 2012 November election, Quinn now faces one of the most critical times of his tenure where his every move will be scrutinized by Republicans who’ve said the 2014 governor’s race is their top priority after devastating losses to the party last week. (AP)
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The move left some legislators scratching their heads, including members of a pension committee who say they haven’t been contacted since before the election.

“I’m embarrassed for him,” said Rep. Jack Franks, a Democrat who chairs the State Government Administration Committee. “As a leader, he should be coming up with ideas and meeting with rank and file and all those stakeholders to come to an agreement.”

Legislative leaders argue that the governor needs to be more effective in their meetings.

“The governor’s style has been very grass roots, I don’t think that’s the best style for the position he’s in,” said Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno, who opposes Quinn on making schools pay for pension costs. “He never seems to be able to utilize the leverage he has as governor to get what he wants to get done.”

Quinn likens his leadership approach to something of a peacemaker: Gather everyone together. Try for consensus. But as the Chicago Democrat enters the next critical weeks, he seems more at home in those old ways as the populist, rallying the public rather than lawmakers.

Some critics say it’s a sign that even after three years, Quinn hasn’t fully transitioned from gadfly to governor. Supporters insist he’s succeeded at his biggest challenges – keeping the governor’s office relatively scandal free, playing a key role in approving civil unions in Illinois, abolishing the death penalty and traveling globally to promote Illinois exports. But others contend that Quinn has not been aggressive enough nor acted quickly enough.

Quinn made a name for himself as a political watchdog in 1970s and 1980s, leading successful efforts to bar legislators from collecting all their pay in advance and cutting the number of Illinois House members by a third. He helped found the consumer watchdog Citizens Utility Board. He was elected to one term as state treasurer in 1990, and was lieutenant governor for six years before being called upon to replace Blagojevich after he was indicted and impeached.

“He has been a solo operator during most of his adult life. He’s had difficulty making the transition to being a chief executive who needs to bring together people from varying perspectives,” said Mike Lawrence, an adviser to former Republican Gov. Jim Edgar and former head of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute.

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