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Pensions, ethics to feature in state of the state speech

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CHICAGO – Gov. Pat Quinn faces big expectations over how he’ll address Illinois’ disastrous finances when he delivers his State of the State speech this week, but he’s hinting he’ll also spend time reminding the public how the state’s image has been cleaned up under his watch.

The annual speech is expected to set the tone for the year, touching on broad themes ahead of a later budget address on the nitty-gritty of running government.

But this is the governor’s best chance to boast of accomplishments, and Quinn has yet to succeed at forging compromise on pension reform and other issues as he did with helping restore the state’s reputation after his two predecessors went off to prison.

Focusing on ethics more than finances could be tricky for Quinn, however. Illinois is staring down the worst pension problem in the nation, with nearly $100 billion in unfunded liability, and he’s on the spot to show progress as Republicans and some fellow Democrats begin eyeing his seat in next year’s governor’s race.

“What I’d like to hear from him is real conviction to resolve serious financial problems,” said Rep. Barbara Wheeler, a Republican from Crystal Lake and one of the newcomers in the Legislature. “What I’m afraid is going to happen is more lip service toward the problem and more accolades toward what is perceived as successes within the state.”

When asked last week, Quinn wouldn’t reveal exactly what he’s going to say in his first major speech of the year Wednesday. But he told reporters it’s important to remember how scandal-free the state has been since 2009 when he was tapped as lieutenant governor to lead Illinois after the embarrassing corruption scandal that engulfed former Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

“We had a very difficult time four years ago,” Quinn said on the day another former governor, George Ryan, was released from prison after serving more than five years for corruption. “My job was to straighten things out in Illinois, in every which way. ... I worked on that every single day the last four years. I’ll continue to do that as long as I have a breath.”

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