Al Jazeera America
By Naureen Khan
October 6, 2015
In
an election cycle during which GOP base voters seem uninterested in
candidates' level of experience in government, Ohio Gov. John Kasich has
it in spades — three years
in the Ohio statehouse, 17 years in Congress, six as the chairman of
the House Budget Committee and now, five years as governor.
In
a wide-ranging question-and-answer session on Tuesday with the U.S.
Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, the 2016 GOP presidential candidate
defined those experiences as an
asset and defended a number of his counter-conventional stances on
issues that have put him out of step with the majority of the Republican
presidential field.
On
immigration reform — a topic that has drawn heated rhetoric from party
frontrunner Donald Trump — Kasich said he supported securing the border,
expanding a guest-worker
program and implementing a path to legalization for a certain portion
of the nation’s 11 million undocumented immigrations. Kasich stopped
short of endorsing a path to citizenship.
“For
those that are here that have been law-abiding, God bless them. They’re
a critical part of our society. … I think they should have a path to
legalization,” he said.
“The idea that we’re going to pick these folks up and ship them out —
that’s just unbelievable.”
Whereas
many of Kasich’s rivals have drifted rightward on immigration reform
after entering the GOP nominating contest, Kasich appears to have moved
in the opposite direction.
As a congressman, he advocated for repealing birthright citizenship, a
Constitutional guarantee that says all children born in the United
States are citizens.
Asked about the issue again, Kasich responded, “If you're born here, you're a citizen. Period, end of story.“
Kasich
again boasted of his decision to expand Medicaid for low-income Ohioans
under a provision of the Affordable Care Act, a course of action
lambasted by hard-liner
conservatives and rejected by many of his fellow GOP governors.
In
the long run, Kasich said, putting government dollars toward improving
health care for the mentally ill and the drug-addicted would pay
dividends for society.
“We
believe over time, it’s a smart issue of arithmetic, but there’s
another issue,” he said. “How about morality? How about being a country
that can embrace and help
people to get on their feet?”
Kasich went so far as to offer to buy Bibles for those that disagreed with his rationale.
“There’s
a book — it’s got a new part and an old part,” he said. “If you don’t
have one, I’ll buy you one, and it talks about how we treat the poor.”
U.S.
Hispanic Chamber of Commerce President Javier Palomarez repeatedly
praised Kasich as a “compassionate conservative” — a governing
philosophy preached by former President
George W. Bush that has since fallen out of favor with the GOP’s more
conservative and tea party-aligned voters who see it as another form of
big government.
Kasich insisted that voters are looking for a “reformer” who is occasionally willing to reject party orthodoxy.
“Sometimes you just have to lead,” he said. “You can’t let the yelling and screaming determine your decision-making.”
Still,
Kasich’s willingness to adopt risky positions has not paid dividends
with his party’s base yet. In the latest Pew Research Center poll, he
drew less than 2 percent
support among possible GOP base voters. He has also dropped from second
place to seventh place in New Hampshire in recent weeks, according to a
NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, a state Kasich himself has said he’s
counting on to propel his campaign.
Not
all of Kasich’s stances, however, fall outside the traditional GOP view
of the role of government. Following the shooting rampage at Umpqua
Community College in Oregon,
Kasich, like many of his fellow contenders, said restricting the
nation’s guns was not the answer, pointing to a larger spiritual deficit
in the country that needs to be addressed.
“I
don’t think that gun control would solve this problem — the deeper
issue is alienation. The deeper issue is loneliness. The deeper issue is
no attention to an individual
who’s really struggling,” he said. “It takes a lot more complicated and
comprehensive answer than just a simple law.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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