The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Kasich’s N.H. showing could be tough to convert into more wins

- By Kathleen Ronayne and Julie Bykowicz

MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. » Republican presidenti­al contender John Kasich spent time and money winning over New Hampshire voters.

He came to next-to-vote South Carolina on Wednesday with a short supply of both.

“You don’t know me,” Kasich told people in Mount Pleasant, a suburb of Charleston. “So I guess I’ve got to go back to the beginning.”

The Ohio governor finished second in New Hampshire’ s primary, well behind Donald Tr ump but well ahead of others. That re- flected Kasich’s singular focus on the state.

By contrast, his campaign — which has far less cash than any of his closest competitor­s — has spent nothing on advertisin­g in South Carolina and the outside groups backing him have put out barely anything. The South Carolina GOP primary is Feb. 20.

That compares with the many millions that Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, along with their allies, invested in TV and radio commercial­s. In recent days, a super PAC boosting Bush put an additional $1.7 million into its South Carolina ad plan. Even Trump, a master of free publicity, is spending $1.2 million on paid ads.

South Carolina is not Kasich’s only blind spot.

His all-in New Hampshire strategy also meant little attention to Nevada, the state that votes after South Carolina, or to most of the dozen states that hold March 1 contests.

“We don’t have to win everything,” said Kasich’s senior adv i ser, Tom Rath. “What we need to do is win enough to keep us alive, which I think we absolutely can do.”

Kasich, who like his rivals has several days of back-toback South Carolina events planned, has spent little time in the state and has fewer employees and volunteers compared with the others. His presence hasn’t been felt — something he acknowledg­ed at campaign stops on Wednesday as he sprinkled biographic­al details such as his father’s career as a postman into his speeches.

“He can get in the game, but he’s got to move fast,” said Glenn McCall, a Republican National Committee member for South Carolina.

The pressure is on. Bush is hoping to parlay his family’s long history in South Carolina, as well as his endorsemen­t by Sen. Lindsey Graham, into a spot ahead of Kasich and Rubio, at least. At a rally in Spartanbur­g, Rubio called the state “definitive and determinat­ive.”

Kasich plans to break from South Carolina politickin­g Monday to visit Michigan, which votes March 8. He sees the potential to do well in that state, and he has a home-court advantage when Ohio votes March 15.

 ?? JIM COLE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? With his wife Karen at his side Republican presidenti­al candidate Ohio Gov. John Kasich cheers with supporters Feb. 9 in Concord, New Hampshire, at his primary night rally.
JIM COLE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS With his wife Karen at his side Republican presidenti­al candidate Ohio Gov. John Kasich cheers with supporters Feb. 9 in Concord, New Hampshire, at his primary night rally.

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