The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Kasich unsure how much he’ll back GOP nominee

- By John Seewer

Fresh off a victory in Ohio’s primary election, the Democratic nominee for the state’s top office is reaching out to supporters of outgoing Republican Gov. John Kasich, whose policies have alienated many GOP supporters in recent years.

Democrat Richard Cordray, who led the federal consumer protection bureau under President Barack Obama, pledged in a video his campaign released Friday that he’ll maintain Kasich’s expansion of Medicaid and the state’s privatized economic developmen­t office, which critics say lacks accountabi­lity.

“Gov. Kasich recently said he’s worried about two issues: Medicaid expansion and JobsOhio. So this message is for Ohioans who agree with Gov. Kasich — I am your candidate,” Cordray said.

Cordray said he believes the JobsOhio office can play a role in workforce developmen­t. “I will work to make sure it fulfills its mission and that it is transparen­t and effective,” he said.

While Kasich isn’t about to back Cordray as his replacemen­t, it remains unclear when or if the termlimite­d governor will campaign for Republican Mike DeWine in the November election.

Kasich on Friday said he’ll definitely vote for DeWine, but he was less clear about how much support he’ll give the Ohio attorney general’s bid for governor.

“The question is how aggressive­ly do I campaign?” Kasich said at a Michigan Press Associatio­n event in East Lansing, Michigan. “And I’ve laid out a couple things that are important to me.”

He said that he and DeWine must come to an agreement on the future of the governor’s Medicaid expansion and his job-creation program, JobsOhio — a compromise he said will happen “as soon as we sit down and talk.”

DeWine’s campaign has said it would welcome Kasich’s endorsemen­t. But he also has said that the plan championed by Kasich to expand the Medicaid government insurance program to cover 700,000 people in Ohio isn’t sustainabl­e financiall­y. He said he wants the federal government to give Ohio more flexibilit­y to craft its own plan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States