Quinn calls for ethics reform

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Gov. Pat Quinn smiles as lawmakers applaud his entrance to the House chambers before delivering his State of the State address to a joint session of the General Assembly at the Illinois State Capitol Wednesday in Springfield. (AP)
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SPRINGFIELD – Gov. Pat Quinn boosted his populist credentials on Wednesday as he looks toward a 2014 re-election bid, calling for tougher conflict-of-interest controls on lawmakers, increasing the minimum wage to $10 per hour and banning military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition feeders.

In the annual State of the State address to a joint session of the General Assembly, Quinn said state law should prohibit lawmakers from voting on issues where they have a conflict of interest.

He urged the Legislature to impose the same kind of ethics requirements on itself that it previously approved for judges and administration officials in a state that has seen its past two governors jailed on corruption charges.

But lawmakers weren’t keen on what’s perceived as a direct challenge to the Legislature’s authority, and even government watchdogs pointed out it’s a thorny issue that isn’t as clear cut as it seems.

Quinn made only scattered references to the state’s most pressing problem – a stifling public-employee pension deficit, but the squeeze it puts on other government spending was an undercurrent throughout the governor’s fifth State of the State address. Quinn pointedly named Senate President John Cullerton’s latest legislation that includes a fallback plan if the first is declared unconstitutional as “the best vehicle to get the job done.”

“Do we want, in the years to come, a prosperous Illinois where working people continue to have good jobs, where businesses thrive, and where all our children have a world-class education?” Quinn asked. “Or do we want to stop the progress and watch our economic recovery stall?”

Elevated to the job after his former running mate, Gov. Rod Blagojevich, was impeached and removed from office in 2009 and elected to a full term the next year, Quinn will face not only stiff Republican competition but a possible primary challenge from one or more high-profile Democrats next spring. GOP lawmakers were keenly aware of the upcoming political season.

“Clearly it was a campaign speech for him,” said Bloomington Sen. Bill Brady, the 2010 GOP nominee who nearly unseated Quinn and is considering another run next year. “He hit some of the right sound bites, but he didn’t address some of the issues that are at the forefront.”

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