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			 “I am deeply honored to become Illinois’ next Comptroller and 
			humbly look forward to serving all the people of Illinois,” Munger 
			said. “I’ll be a guardian of their money and a watchdog for 
			Illinois’ finances. Our state is in terrible financial shape, and 
			I’ll do everything I can to help turn things around.” 
 “I’m not interested in a political career; only on doing what is 
			best for the state we all love and want to make great again,” Munger 
			added. “With that in mind, I will relentlessly advocate that the 
			General Assembly put a Constitutional amendment on the 2016 ballot 
			to merge the Comptroller’s office with the Treasurer’s office. 
			That’s what Judy wanted, and the people deserve the opportunity to 
			vote on it. I would look forward to helping eliminate the very 
			office to which I was appointed.”
 
 A career businesswoman with an undergraduate degree from the 
			University of Illinois and an M.B.A. from Northwestern, Munger made 
			her first run for state office last year, falling short of defeating 
			an incumbent state representative by just 1349 votes in the 
			Democrat-leaning 59th district. A full bio is below.
 
			
			 “No one can ever replace Judy Baar Topinkia, but Leslie is the 
			perfect candidate to continue building on Judy’s legacy,” Gov.-elect 
			Rauner said. “Leslie has always been laser focused on fiscal and 
			economic issues, and as Comptroller, she will do everything within 
			her power to help fix our state’s broken finances.”
 “A first step towards delivering greater efficiency and reform for 
			Illinois taxpayers is to merge the offices of Comptroller and 
			Treasurer,” Rauner continued. “That is something that Leslie and I 
			both support and believe should be the legislature’s focus in the 
			days and weeks ahead. Rather than a special election for a 
			short-term appointment, next year’s ballot should include a 
			Constitutional amendment to merge the offices. That would be a 
			long-term answer that will result in greater value for taxpayers. It 
			would pass, and when it does, Leslie would be able to immediately 
			begin work on winding down and merging the offices. That’s the right 
			path to take and in the best interest of Illinoisans.”
 
 About Leslie Munger
 Age: 58 (9/5/1956)
 
 Family: Married to John Munger, two sons - Tom and Andy
 
 Education:  University of Illinois, BS (1978)
 Northwestern University, Kellogg School of Management, MBA (1982)
 Employment History:
 
 Helene Curtis/Unilever - 1984-2001: Category Director, responsible 
			for the $800 million U.S. Hair Care business
 
 Procter and Gamble - 1982-1984: Assistant Brand Manager
 
 McKinsey & Company - 1978-1982: Manager of Recruiting
 Community 
			Service & Honors: 
 Lincolnshire Citizen of the Year, 2004
 
 The Riverside Foundation, serving developmentally disabled adults
 Riverside Foundation Auxiliary Volunteer of the Year, 2013
 
			 
 Current Volunteer; Past Director and Women’s Board President
 
 Vernon Township Republicans, Precinct Committeeman and past Vice 
			Chairman
 
 Lake County Republican Federation Board of Governors
 
 University of Illinois Student Affairs Advisory Council
 
 Past President and Board Member, School District 103 Learning Fund 
			Foundation
 
 Past President, Lincolnshire Village Club
 
 Former Cub Scout Den Leader, Stevenson Football Parent Volunteer, 
			University of Illinois Sigma Chi Mom’s Club President
 
 Electoral History: Republican Candidate for State House (59th 
			District). Lost to incumbent Carol Sente by 1,349 votes. Munger has 
			also served as a Republican precinct committeewoman. Husband is vice 
			chairman of Lake County Republicans.
 
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
			Issue Positions
 Why She Ran For General Assembly: "I’m a lifelong Illinoisan, 
			a businesswoman, community leader, and most importantly, a mom. Like 
			many of you, I am concerned by what is happening to our state. Many 
			of us have friends, neighbors or family members who have left 
			Illinois or who are thinking about leaving, either for a new job, to 
			avoid the high taxes, or simply for better opportunities. The bad 
			state of Illinois’ economy really hit home for us… when our son, 
			Tom, graduated from the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana 
			with a degree in Mechanical Engineering and found that his best job 
			opportunities were out of state. Tom is now living in Texas. I never 
			dreamed we would be moving our son 1200 miles away from his Illinois 
			home to start his career. The poor fiscal policies put in place by 
			those leading our state for the past decade… are driving businesses 
			and jobs out of our state, splitting up our families and exporting 
			our children. I am running for office to change this. I am a 
			Springfield outsider; not a career politician. I will refuse a 
			state-paid pension and will work tirelessly to bring businesses and 
			jobs back to our state. It’s time for new leadership in Illinois.” 
			(http://votemunger.com/about-leslie/)
 
 Pension Reform: Opposed Quinn's pension bill. Supports moving 
			state employees to 401(k)’s. (http://votemunger.com/pension-reform/; 
			Leslie Munger, Chicago Tribune Editorial Board Questionnaire)
 
 Taxes: Supported rolling back income tax rate to 3.75%. 
			Opposes a graduated income tax. (Leslie Munger, Chicago Tribune 
			Editorial Board Questionnaire)
 
 
			
			 
			Consolidating Comptroller and Treasurer: "I would reduce 
			duplication within state agencies by eliminating the office of 
			Lieutenant Governor and combining the State Comptroller and 
			Treasurer's offices." (Leslie Munger, Chicago Tribune Editorial 
			Board Questionnaire)
 
 Local Government Consolidation: "Illinois should move toward 
			consolidation of various levels of government such as mosquito 
			abatement districts, redundant townships and the 900+ overlapping 
			Illinois school districts to provide taxpayer relief and more 
			efficient services. What worked decades ago isn't necessarily the 
			most economic and productive structure today. As in business, I 
			would recommend we commission an independent study, analyze the 
			results, and develop and gain agreement to a plan to restructure our 
			local government units. Then, subject to Illinois law, we would 
			either vote on it or send it to the voters to be decided in a 
			referendum." (Leslie Munger, Chicago Tribune Editorial Board 
			Questionnaire)
 
 Term Limits: "I support term limits for government officials 
			and legislative leaders as outlined by the citizen-initiated term 
			limits amendment… I feel the amendment should have been placed on 
			the General Election ballot for the voters of Illinois to decide." 
			(Leslie Munger, Chicago Tribune Editorial Board Questionnaire)
 
 Women’s Issues: “I believe in freedom and that it is not the 
			role of government to interfere with a woman’s personal health 
			choice.” (Press Release, Citizens for Leslie Munger, 10/31/14)
 
 Endorsements
 
 Endorsed for State Representative in 2014 by Chicago Tribune: "Munger 
			is a poised and whip-smart challenger... She is endorsed." 
			(Editorial, “Endorsements for the Illinois House,” Chicago Tribune, 
			10/23/14)
 
 Endorsed for State Representative in 2014 by Daily Herald: "Munger, 
			a community volunteer and former marketing executive making her 
			first run for office, opposes extending Illinois' 2011 income tax 
			increase, opposes Senate Bill 16 that would cost many suburban 
			schools state funding, and supports moving state employees' future 
			retirement benefits to a 401(k)-style plan. She has the ideas and 
			the character to make an effective legislator. We endorse Munger." 
			(Editorial, “Endorsement: Munger in House Dist. 59,” Daily Herald, 
			10/11/14)
 
			[Mike Schrimpf, Office of 
			Governor-elect Bruce Rauner] |