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Quinn faces key leadership test soon

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FILE - In this file photo taken, Aug. 1, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signs the Illinois Dream Act into law surrounded by students and supporters of the bill. 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 whoíve said the 2014 governorís race is their top priority after devastating losses to the party last week.(AP Photo/M. Spencer Green) (M. Spencer Green (STF))

CHICAGO – Through his own insistence, the next few weeks will offer a critical test of leadership for Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn.

He has set an early January deadline for solving the state’s pension crisis – a decades-old problem he says he was “put on this Earth” to solve. He’s facing lawmakers intent on expanded gambling in the state despite his veto. And all of it is magnified by the emerging 2014 campaign for governor, with Republicans already lining up to take him on and a few of his party colleagues considering it too.

A self-styled outsider whose first job was cleaning up after the Rod Blagojevich corruption scandal, Quinn’s leadership has been challenged from the start. His populist style, his wavering on some issues, his almost-singular focus on pensions at times and his ability to work with lawmakers all have been questioned.

But Quinn confidently rattles off a list of accomplishments from his first three years in office, and expresses a characteristic mix of optimism and idealism both about the daunting tasks ahead and his ability to ward off challengers.

“I know how to compete and don’t underestimate me when it comes to election campaigns,” he told The Associated Press in an interview last week. “But it’s not time for that. It’s time for problem-solving in a bipartisan way, to really put some of these issues behind us in Illinois so we can go forward.”

For the past year, Quinn has been intensely focused on overhauling the nation’s worst state pension crisis, with Illinois $95 billion behind in funding its liability. After an emerging solution fell apart last spring over a proposal to shift some pension costs to local school districts, Quinn called lawmakers into a costly special session and even hosted a junior high forum on the topic. Legislative leaders recently have stressed some areas where they have common ground, but no new compromise ideas have emerged publicly.

On Sunday afternoon last week – the traditionally quiet day when he held news conferences as a political reformer – Quinn introduced a social media campaign intended to galvanize public support for pension reform, but mostly generated buzz by featuring a cartoon snake, “Squeezy the Pension Python.”

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