
Former Sen. Adlai Stevenson III (D-IL), who ran for governor as an independent in 1986 after he was saddled with an unacceptable running mate for lieutenant governor in the primaries, just told TPMDC that if he were in the situation that Gov. Pat Quinn (D-IL) is today, with controversial candidate for lieutenant governor Scott Lee Cohen, he would do the same thing -- quit the Democratic ticket, and run as an independent.
"Well, you know I've been asked that over and over again, and I just don't want to be presumptuous by advising the governor what to do," said Stevenson, when asked if Quinn should run as an independent. "I'm saying what I did. I could not run in good conscience with someone unqualified as my running mate for lieutenant governor, so I resigned and ran as an independent."
When asked if he would personally run as an independent rather than run alongside Cohen, Stevenson answered: "Absolutely. No question about it."
Cohen has faced controversy since he narrowly won a six-way primary on Tuesday, with allegations involving past domestic violence, steroid use, being behind on child support payments, and even possible attempted sexual assault of his then-wife. Cohen has admitted to steroid use, but has thus far refused to give in to calls that he withdraw.
In Illinois, candidates for governor and for lieutenant governor run in completely separate primaries, but then run together as a joint ticket in the general election. Back in 1986, Stevenson became the Democratic nominee for governor. His campaign was effectively derailed, however, when activists for fringe political leader Lyndon LaRouche won the Democratic primaries for lieutenant governor and secretary of state.
Rather than campaign for office with a LaRoucheite running mate, Stevenson took the extraordinary step of abdicating the Democratic nomination, and running for governor on a specially-created ballot line called the "Solidarity Party."
"I was strongly advised by my running mates and others to stay on the ticket, run, we're gonna win anyway," said Stevenson. "But that wasn't the test. I couldn't in good conscience run, joined at the hip to a cultist, and put him within the proverbial heartbeat of the governorship, and the answer was no, I could not do that."
In order to do this, he had to field candidates for all the other statewide offices, as well, though the only seriously contested races were for governor/lieutenant governor, and for secretary of state. "And so we had to explain to people, they had to vote the straight Democratic ticket and then cross over and just vote for the Solidarity Party for governor, lieutenant governor and secretary of state -- with no money. Nobody gave us a chance."
Stevenson ultimately lost his 1986 race to incumbent Republican Gov. Jim Thompson, taking 40% of the vote. He is convinced that if this mess had not happened, he would have been elected governor. "It would have been a landslide. I won 40 percent as a solidarity candidate," said Stevenson. "The Democratic regular slate got eight percent. Thompson won with 52 percent. I had no money. There's zero question."
Stevenson pointed out that if Quinn were to run for governor as independent, he would not have as many of these difficulties. Under current election law, he could simply mount an independent candidacy without having to find a whole new slate of statewide candidates. Also, voters in Illinois can no longer check off a single place on their ballot to vote a straight party ticket, but instead must vote in each race individually. In the 1986 race, the Stevenson campaign had to educate voters to not vote straight-ticket, which isn't an issue anymore.
Stevenson blamed the current situation on a breakdown in the Democratic Party's structure. The voters were not properly informed, he said, which allowed Cohen to win a divided race by financing his own campaign.
"Nowadays, I think if you're running for governor, and there's a whole field of candidates out there, and you just spot somebody for whatever office that is clearly unqualified, I think you have a duty to tell the people," said Stevenson. "That did not happen this time. The party organization is really dead."
Walter Mitty
February 5, 2010 2:22 PM
So who would run a top the Dem ticket? Hynes? and what if Cohen then stepped down himself? What a mess - but Quinn has to do it. Too bad the GOP didn't nominate Dillard.
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WaitWut?
February 5, 2010 3:38 PM
This is a serious mess. I wonder if Quinn has the right connections to put a hit on this guy.
I remember the Stevenson election, as well. Pissed my dad off, big time. LaRouche was scum, but Stevenson would have been elected had he remained on the Democratic ticket. Illinois still votes along the 2-party line and very blue. They see Independents as wishy-washy. It's like saying you like BOTH the Cubs and the White Sox. Just wrong.
With that being said, I'd like to add...
GO CUBS!!! Yep...this is the year!!! Maybe...or not.
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mattstan
February 5, 2010 4:15 PM in reply to WaitWut?
Heh. As an embarrassed Illinoisan, I was considering switching my #1 casual obsession back from politics to baseball -- but as a Sox fan, I think this year I'm damned either way.
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WaitWut?
February 5, 2010 4:37 PM in reply to mattstan
Well, I can see your problem. You're a Sox fan. It's never too late to change. ;-)
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CityGuy
February 5, 2010 4:57 PM
What a screwy election law! Forcing you to have a running mate not of your choice? And I thought Missouri's law odd that runs separate Governor and Lt. Governor races (so that you can have a Governor who's a Democrat, and a Republican Lt. Governor, as is the current situation in Missouri).
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ejg3
February 5, 2010 5:49 PM
Having a primary "winner" with only 20% of the vote, which is true in both party's primaries is also ridiculous. While some states require a 50% plus win, a figure of 355 is used in other jurisdictions where more than two candidates run or the office is filled at a party convention. Illinois outlawing of voting straight ticket is also questionable--it's certainly not a requirement and just makes the process longer for those that do it with 20 ovals filled rather than one.
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KatzLazer
February 5, 2010 10:26 PM
Uh, Stevenson lost when he did that... you mention it, but it's buried in this piece. I talked to someone who was involved in that Stevenson campaign today and he said - and this seems to make sense, that there are just 15% of voters you just can't reach or won't believe that the democrats are not the democrats this time. You are putting yourself at a huge disadvantage doing that.
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lst10
February 6, 2010 2:44 AM
Allow me to play devil's advocate:
This guy wasn't actually convicted on any of these allegations was he?
And he was elected in a fair election, right? If he wants to voluntarily withdraw then that's one thing, but if not...they're stuck with him.
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lynmary
February 6, 2010 10:33 AM in reply to lst10
They are stuck with him till november, when they will lose.
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Ron Thompson
February 6, 2010 2:28 PM
They impeached and removed Blagojevich, didn't they?
If Cohen won't go quietly, the Governor and Speaker Madigan should announce that in January the first order of business in the House will be a resolution impeaching him. If I recall correctly, there is no "high crimes and misdemeanors" language in the Illinois Constitution; in fact, no limitation at all on the impeachment power.
In response to Walter Mitty, there was no Democratic candidate for governor on the 1986 ballot. The Democratic state central committee has the power to name a replacement if the nominated candidate withdraws, but they chose not to do so in 1986, and would doubtless do the same in 2010.
But, Jesus, Illinois Democrats could screw up a baked potato. Twice in 24 years they nominate a toxic nobody for Lieutenant Governor. It makes you think that maybe things were better when the party slated candidates, as they did into the 1970s. They still had to get through a primary, and the slated candidate for governor in 1972, the late Paul Simon, lost the primary to Dan Walker. But at least it provided some oversight and review by people who had a stake in putting together a winning ticket.
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