Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jul 2010 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2010 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/aboutus/feedback/index.html Website: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Abdon M. Pallasch LESSER-KNOWN GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE As many as 50 people turned out Thursday night to see if the five lesser-known candidates for governor had better ideas for solving the state?s budget crisis than the two major-party candidates. At this first debate of gubernatorial candidates at Chicago State University ? skipped by Gov. Quinn and Republican nominee State Sen. Bill Brady ? most of the candidates called for cutting taxes and spending =2E But Green Party candidate Rich Whitney ? who took 10 percent of the vote last time around ? called for $3 billion more spending to pay for free college for all Illinois students, funded in part by a tax on real estate speculation, hiking the state income tax to 5 percent and legalizing and taxing marijuana. Whitney called ?crazy? and ?absurd? the current system under which Quinn submitted, and the Legislature approved, a budget that spends more than it takes in. Whitney?s plan was more popular with students here than the ideas of Libertarian Party candidate Lex Green and Constitution Party candidate Michael White, who backed easier access to loans for students instead of scholarships. ?If you?re receiving money from the state, you?re not going to like my answer,? Green told the students. ?Since 2003, tuition has gone up 10 percent, professors? pay has gone up on average about 20 percent. Administrative pay has gone up 100 percent. Non-administrative workers ? their pay has gone up 280 percent. Every program is not helping students, it?s subsidizing the employment of government workers.? Independent candidate for governor Scott Lee Cohen, a pawn broker, said, ?Every year, legislators are given grants, scholarships to give away: 1,600 scholarships, $13 million. Is there one student in this room who received one of those scholarships?? No hands went up. ?I didn?t think so,? Cohen said. William ?Dock? Walls, who was knocked off the Democratic ballot for governor by Quinn?s allies, blasted Quinn often Thursday and the two major parties ?They make it as hard as they can to run as an independent,? Walls said. ?You want somebody fresh. You want somebody new.? Walls? proposal for bringing new money into the state budget is to throw open naming rights to state buildings such as the Thompson Center. Green said by cutting spending on health and education back to 2008 levels, ?We really aren?t doing anything Draconian.? Whitney vehemently disagreed. ?I don?t think we can possibly agree that it?s not Draconian to make further cuts in health and education,? Whitney said. ?We cannot possibly continue this way: teachers getting pink slips, class sizes getting higher. This is Draconian. We already have one of the most regressive tax systems in Illinois. There are probably about 70,000 mental health services recipients in the state of Illinois that will be kicked out of community-based services, and most of them are probably going to end up in prison or in homeless shelters.? But just when it seemed Green and Whitney disagreed on everything, Green said he favored legalizing marijuana to fight gang violence in Chicago. Whitney is the only one of the five candidates assured a spot on the November ballot. The other four have all had their petitions challenged. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt