Los Angeles Times

A new, unpredicta­ble GOP candidate

Blunt-talking Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who embraced Obamacare, faces long odds in the presidenti­al race.

- By Mark Z. Barabak mark.barabak @latimes.com Twitter: @markzbarab­ak

a large and varied Republican field, there may be no more confoundin­g presidenti­al candidate than Tuesday’s entry, John Kasich.

In the 1990s, he was part of the conservati­ve revolution on Capitol Hill. As Ohio’s two-term governor, he has cut income taxes and government regulation, battled organized labor and approved new restrictio­ns on abortion and voting rights.

He also spared several inmates facing execution, supported higher taxes on cigarettes and fracking, and horrified conservati­ves by expanding healthcare access under the Affordable Care Act, throwing in a lecture on what it means to be a good Christian.

“When you die and get to the meeting with St. Peter, he’s probably not going to ask you much about what you did about keeping government small,” Kasich said. “But he’s going to ask what you did for the poor. You better have a good answer.”

His political unpredicta­bility, late start and relatively meager fundraisin­g make Kasich a distinct underdog in the Republican Party contest. He may not even qualify for the first presidenti­al debate next month in Cleveland.

But Kasich insisted Tuesday that he had defied long odds throughout his career and that he offered a set of skills no other candidate can match. “I know what needs to be done,” he said at a kickoff rally in Columbus at his alma mater, Ohio State University. “I’ve been there at all levels, OK?”

Delivered in his characteri­stic plain-spoken style, Kasich’s long, meandering speech spoke of the economic anxiety many Americans feel and the disillusio­nment of African Americans convinced “the system” is stacked again them. Frequently invoking his faith, he said society too often substitute­d harsh judgment for care and compassion.

He offered few policy specifics, however, beyond a summons to ignore party labels and work toward solutions. “Policy is more important than politics, ideology or any of the other nonsense we see,” Kasich said.

The appearance in front of thousands of cheering supporters distilled the candidate to his essence: It was unscripted, ambitious, scattered and often assertivel­y blunt. Indeed, one of the largest questions surroundin­g Kasich’s candidacy is a personal one: Is he too abrasive to be elected president?

Stories abound of his gruff persona; of a prickly meeting with local reporters in New Hampshire, which holds the first primary; of lashing out at a wealthy GOP donor who questioned his embrace of Obamacare; of threatenin­g lobbyists in Columbus, the state capital, if they obstructed his efforts. “If you’re not on the bus, we’ll run over you with the bus,” he told them two days after he was elected governor. “And I’m not kidding.”

Kasich doesn’t apologize for his rough manner, citing his blue-collar upbringing in an industrial town outside Pittsburgh. “We’re pretty direct where we come from,” he said at a recent news conference, adding: “At the end of the day, it’s results. Did people feel lifted? Did they feel included?”

Kasich’s willingnes­s to break with conservati­ves, by among other things, defending the federal education standards known as Common Core and backing a path to citizenshi­p for people in the country illegally, ensure he will, at the least, stand out.

Whether that is a good thing remains to be seen.

His backers say Kasich exhibits an unflinchin­g, unbeholden style that voters, tired of the political same old, will appreciate. “There’s a freshness and authentici­ty,” said Curt Steiner, a longtime Republican strategist in Columbus. “He’s not a cookie-cutter candidate.”

Some Republican activists — which is to say those most likely to vote in the party’s nominating contest — take a less kind view.

“Kasich has at times gone out of his way to poke his fellow Republican­s in the eye,” said the conservati­ve National Review in a story asIn sessing Kasich’s presidenti­al hopes. Many may “be scratching their heads and asking: Is he serious? And, if so, why bother?”

Kasich, 63, is making his second try for the White House. He waged a shortlived campaign in 1999 but, by his own admission, was too young and inexperien­ced to take on, much less defeat, the overwhelmi­ng front-runner, Texas Gov. George W. Bush.

In Congress, where he represente­d central Ohio for 18 years, Kasich built a reputation for fiscal conservati­sm; as chairman of the House Budget Committee, he worked with President Clinton to balance the federal budget for the first time in a generation. Even then, Kasich broke with many in his party, voting for an assault weapons ban, opposing “corporate welfare” and fighting defense spending he deemed wasteful.

After leaving Congress in 2001, Kasich hosted a program on Fox News and worked as a managing director at Lehman Bros. until the Wall Street firm collapsed in 2008. He returned to office in 2010 when he was elected Ohio governor in a close race. Four years later, Kasich romped to reelection, winning 86 of Ohio’s 88 counties, including the Democratic stronghold­s surroundin­g Cleveland, Akron and Toledo.

Part of his appeal as a presidenti­al candidate, at least on paper, is his political strength in a state that Republican­s almost certainly need to win the White House. His 55% approval in a February survey is a notable contrast with some of his rivals, including Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who are seen more negatively than positively back home.

Ohioans have grown accustomed to Kasich’s sometimes raw, blunt-spoken style — sort of like the crank at the local coffee shop, said John Green, who teaches political science at the University of Akron. “He’s got a lot of strong opinions,” Green said, “but he’s not seen as mean-spirited.”

Kasich doubtless benefits from Ohio’s economic recovery. Although it’s debatable how much credit the governor deserves, he boasts of turning an $8-billion gap in the state budget into a $1.5-billion surplus and brags of a significan­t drop in the jobless rate, to 5.2% in June.

But it’s unclear how indulgent those just getting to know Kasich might be.

Last year, at a donor conference sponsored by the conservati­ve Koch brothers, Kasich angrily rebuked a major GOP contributo­r who challenged his decision to expand Medicaid under the federal healthcare law. According to a Politico account of the episode, which happened behind closed doors, Kasich pointed a finger, raised his voice and repeated his admonition about arriving at the Pearly Gates in good stead.

Another Koch brothers gathering is planned next month in Columbus. The scheduled speakers include Republican presidenti­al hopefuls Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio of Florida, Ted Cruz and Rick Perry of Texas, and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana.

Notably absent from the lineup: home-state Gov. Kasich.

 ?? Jim Cole
Associated Press ?? JOHN KASICH arrives for a town hall meeting in Nashua, N.H., hours after announcing his candidacy. “I know what needs to be done,” he said earlier in Ohio.
Jim Cole Associated Press JOHN KASICH arrives for a town hall meeting in Nashua, N.H., hours after announcing his candidacy. “I know what needs to be done,” he said earlier in Ohio.

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