Bloomberg
By Mark Niquette
September 28, 2015
The
weekend after Republican House Speaker John Boehner announced his
resignation amid complaints that he was too conciliatory, John Kasich
found fresh virtue in cooperation.
The
Ohio governor and presidential candidate told audiences in Iowa, where
conservative and evangelical voters dominate the first Republican
caucuses, that it will take
an experienced leader unafraid to compromise to get action on
immigration, taxes and other issues.
Kasich’s
appearances in Iowa exposed a party at an inflection point. While some
conservatives celebrated the departure of Boehner as a leader who
wouldn’t stand against
Democrats and President Barack Obama, Kasich said they’re the minority.
He’s betting that Boehner’s demise and the prospect of ideological
warfare in Congress will give his pragmatism a new sheen for party
members.
“Everybody, at the end of the day, knows that we have to solve problems in this country.”
Governor John Kasich
“They
do want change, they do want reform, but I think when we get to the
final day, it’s going to be about, well, who can actually deliver it?”
Kasich said Saturday in
an interview between events in the state where caucuses begin in four
months. “Everybody, at the end of the day, knows that we have to solve
problems in this country.”
After
a woman at a Sioux City foreign-policy forum asked Kasich how to get
Washington politicians to compromise, he took a snap poll: Who in the
room was for “more fighting,”
and who was for “more compromise?”
The latter drew some applause from the crowd of about 100 people.
“John Boehner had a 94 percent conservative rating last year,” Kasich said. “I guess that wasn’t good enough.”
Boehner
said Friday that he will leave Congress at October’s end as some
presidential candidates and members of his caucus push for a government
shutdown to defund Planned
Parenthood, which they say promotes abortions. His departure raises the
prospect of a House whose leader will have no ability to move
legislation that would pass muster with the Senate or a Democratic
president.
Republicans
willing to deal with Democrats are “drowned out by the voices that
yell, ‘Stand for something,’” Kasich told reporters after the Sioux City
event.
“I’m hearing increasingly, ‘How do we get people to work together?’”
Later,
at a Council Bluffs hog roast, Kasich touted the ability to “hang with
principle but yet to be constructive” and “compromise without
compromising your principles.”
As
candidates without government experience top the polls, led by
real-estate mogul Donald Trump and neurosurgeon Ben Carson, Kasich has
positioned himself as a leader
who can buck orthodoxy despite his career as an 18-year member of
Congress and two-term governor.
Since
joining the race in July, Kasich has focused most attention and
resources on New Hampshire, which holds the first U.S. primary. While
he’s polling well there after
spending $5 million on television ads, he’s near the back of the pack
in national and Iowa surveys.
With
Wisconsin’s Scott Walker bowing out, Kasich is now the only Midwestern
governor in the race. He has hired two staff members in Iowa and is
making two trips there
in five days, after only three visits the entire year.
Walker
had been a national frontrunner until his campaign collapsed after a
string of wooden appearances, and he quit the race Sept. 21.
Walker’s
departure and the inability of establishment candidates such as former
Florida Governor Jeb Bush or Florida Senator Marco Rubio to gain
traction creates an opening
for Kasich, said Craig Robinson, a former political director for the
Iowa Republican Party. A respectable showing in Iowa by Kasich will hurt
his rivals and boost his own chances in New Hampshire, Robinson said.
“It’s
a smart play,” Robinson said. “There is a void here, and I think people
are interested in hearing and seeing from him more.”
Unfamiliar Face
Kasich’s
biggest challenge is getting better known, said Cory Crowley, his state
director and a former aide to U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa.
“You
hear a lot of references to, ‘Oh, the guy from Ohio,’ or ‘the guy who
did so well in the debates’ or ‘the guy who’s kind of the adult in the
room,’” Crowley said.
“But they don’t always associate the name.”
There
are Iowa Republicans who cheer Boehner’s departure and will react
suspiciously to Kasich’s calls for comity, said state Representative
Mary Ann Hanusa, his chairwoman
there.
Yet Iowans are pragmatic and want government to work, she said.
“Compromising
has sort of a bad connotation to it,” Hanusa said. “I want someone who
can look at something critically who can say, ‘These are my views, but I
can still
listen to the other side, I can still try to find common ground.’”
Brian
Johnson, a 54 year-old financial consultant from Sergeant Bluff outside
Sioux Falls, describes himself as a conservative Republican and said
after hearing Kasich
that he hasn’t settled on a candidate. Johnson said he hopes Kasich
remains an option when the caucuses take place Feb. 1.
“Is there a perfect candidate?” he asked. “We do need someone who can help people from both sides unite.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment