Politics & Government
Pat Quinn and Bruce Rauner Jab and Jabber at Tribune Editorial Board Session
The governor candidates sit side by side for first time. We learn one is as corrupt as Rod Blagojevich and the other profits off misery.

Gov. Pat Quinn and Bruce Rauner sat side by side and swiped at each other before the Chicago Tribune editorial board on Tuesday, trading insults and ideas in their first face-to-face exchange.
The Democratic governor and Republican challenger discussed growing the economy, the minimum wage, education, corruption and reform β and Rod Blagojevichβs hair.
Find out what's happening in Crystal Lake-Caryfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βHis so-called plan is clear as mud,β Quinn said of Raunerβs economic recovery plan.
βYou donβt understand arithmetic,β Quinn said of Raunerβs education plans. βYou donβt want kids to learn arithmetic because you want to slash their budget in their schools.β
Find out what's happening in Crystal Lake-Caryfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βYouβve kept Blagojevich people,β Rauner told Quinn, pointing to corruption in IDOT. βThe only difference between Pat and Rod is the hair.β
βPhony reformβ is what the Quinn administration is all about, Rauner said.
βIf Pat Quinn was serious about raising the minimum wage, he could have done it,β Rauner said.
You canβt even mow your lawn, Rauner said. And youβre a wine snob, Quinn shot back. Well ... not really. But they might as well have for the obvious distaste each had for the other.
Quinn essentially called Rauner a money-grubbing rich man who doesnβt care about people: βYouβve made a fortune off the misfortune of vulnerable human beings.β
And Rauner said Quinn was a failure and part of the same corrupt political establishment that spawned Blagojevich and Mike Madigan: βHeβs a failed governor.β
QUINN AND RAUNER ON THE ECONOMY
Youβll find more videos at ChicagoTribune.com.
The candidates will meet a few more times before the November election at agreed-upon debates β on Oct. 9 in Peoria, Oct. 14 and Oct. 16 in Chicago.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.