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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Quinn, Durbin rally Kane Dems

Governor PQuinn. | Jean Lachat~Sun-Times

Governor Pat Quinn. | Jean Lachat~Sun-Times

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Updated: April 6, 2013 6:05AM



AURORA — The state’s top two Democrats turned out on Sunday for the Kane County Democrats annual Harry S. Truman Dinner.

Kane County Democrat Chairman Mark Guethle said he invited Gov. Pat Quinn as the keynote speaker and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin as a “special honored guest.”

“It is the first time Gov. Quinn has attended the dinner since being elected governor and it is the first time since I’ve been chairman that Sen. Durbin has come,” Guethle said.

Guethle said the party is moving forward after a victorious November election. “We are on a roll,” Guethle said.

Around 200 Democrats joined the party’s leaders at Pipers Banquets in Aurora for the annual fundraiser and to support candidates facing challengers on April 9.

While they began their first course, Durbin said “You know what happened on Friday. The Republicans pushed through the sequestration,” he said to boos from the audience.

“They like to say the Democrats did it,” he said.

Durbin said Democrats presented a bill that would have closed two tax loopholes, apply savings in other areas and avoid sequestration.

He said the “so-called Warren Buffet rule,” named after the “second wealthiest man in America with a conscience,” was put forward. Buffet has publicly stated that he pays a lower income tax rate than his secretary.

“One out of five millionaires are paying lower income tax rates than their secretaries and janitors in their buildings. We said the wealthy have to pay at least the same,” Durbin said to applause.

Durbin said the tax code is loaded with “incentives” for American companies to move jobs overseas.

“You don’t need a PhD in economics to figure this one out,” the senior Illinois senator said.

Durbin said Republicans rejected both and imposed a filibuster in the Senate.

“Rather than close the two loopholes, they started the sequestration. It means we are going to lose 750,000 jobs,” he said, adding funding for medical research to find cures for diabetes, cancer and HIV will be cut.

“Republicans have said no one will notice. I am going to notice,” Durbin said.

But Durbin said President Obama is determined to fight. “It can make a difference, and Kane County people can tell you why,” Durbin said, referring to last November’s election of Congressmen Bill Foster, Democrat from Naperville, and Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat from Hoffman Estates.

Durbin closed by saying: “I have a warm place in my heart for Kane County,” Durbin said.

“We originally were a few — look at us now,” he said to a standing ovation.

Quinn started with a standing ovation. He said Kane County Democrats are known to “work hard and organize” and he personally identified the local elected officials in the room.

He remembered the unions a couple of times.

“We have some tough issues ahead of us,” Quinn said.

“We completed 15-months of negotiations with our AFSCME employees and came to a tentative agreement. I am hopeful they will vote in favor of the agreement. It is important we honor all those who work and those who work for the public’s interest,” he said.

“With our labor unions we have to work hard to build our state,” Quinn said, adding when he became governor the state did not have a public works bill in 10 years. Quinn even “called a roll” of the labor unions in the room.

Quinn said Illinois needs a “jobs agenda.”

“We have to make sure our manufacturing continues its comeback,” he said.

Quinn said Illinois has created 40,000 new manufacturing jobs in the last few years and “we want to continue to momentum.”

“…In the end the Democrat Party belongs to everyday people who walk the precincts. You have shown us all around Illinois how to do it,” the governor told his Kane County audience.





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