Los Angeles Times

Kasich is starting to sling, sort of

His sunny campaign still lagging, he aims some mild barbs at Trump while stumping in Wisconsin.

- By Chris Megerian

WAUKESHA, Wis. — It’s no longer Mr. Nice Guy for John Kasich, at least by his relentless­ly sunny standard during this campaign.

Shortly after kicking off one of his typical town hall meetings here, the Ohio governor launched into a criticism of what he called Donald Trump’s “absurd” plan to ban Muslim immigrants. Then he f lew east to tee off on the Republican frontrunne­r on Trump’s home turf of Manhattan.

“He is really not prepared to be president of the United States,” Kasich said Thursday.

In a campaign marred by mudslingin­g, Kasich’s criticisms were mild, but they nonetheles­s represent an ongoing shift for a candidate who has struggled to gain traction with Republican voters and whose string of losses leaves open the question of why he persists in running.

“I’m still here,” he said this week. “Maybe you’ll warm up to me.”

Kasich, who’s won nowhere except his home state, appears all but assured to lose Wisconsin’s primary on Tuesday and trails in polls in New York and Pennsylvan­ia, which vote in late April.

He may have survived longer than 14 other Republican candidates, but in a year in which the electorate has cried out with anger, his prescripti­on of warmth and moderation hasn’t caught on.

“He has an image of being somewhat more moderate, and the type of campaign he’s run has reinforced that image,” said Alan Abramowitz, an Emory University political science professor. “I don’t think there’s enough of these moderate Republican voters left.”

Here in Wisconsin, like much of the rest of the country, voters have become increasing­ly polarized after years of open political warfare between Republican Gov. Scott Walker and public- sector unions.

“They kind of like the fact that there was a fight,” said Rick Wilson, a Republican consultant. “They’re much more inf lected with the current sensibilit­y of a combat-orientated Republican Party.”

Kasich is more likely to talk about the need to comfort the lonely than rail against political opponents, either within his party or among Democrats. He speaks often about trying to bridge gaps at a time when Republican primary voters seem less interested in reconcilia­tion than venting their frustratio­ns.

“Kasich is running in the space that’s traditiona­lly been the successful one in American politics — the repairers of the breach,” said Steve Schmidt, a Republican strategist who worked for John McCain’s presidenti­al campaign in 2008. “But that’s not playing out in this election cycle.”

John Macy, chairman of the Republican Party in Waukesha County, suggested a simple explanatio­n for why Kasich hadn’t gained more support.

“Everybody likes a winner, and he hasn’t won a state” besides Ohio, he said.

Kasich has won even fewer delegates than Marco Rubio, the Florida senator who dropped out of the race after losing his home state March 15. The latest survey from the highly regarded Marquette Law School poll shows Kasich on track to finish last of the three remaining Republican candidates in Wisconsin.

Despite poor polling, Kasich has insisted that he will perform better in lateApril primaries in the Northeast and mid- Atlantic regions, where more moderate voters may be skeptical of Cruz’s hard- line ideology and Trump’s unpredicta­bility.

But he’s already fallen short in potentiall­y favorable places like Michigan and Massachuse­tts, and at this point, it’s mathematic­ally impossible for Kasich to secure the Republican nomination during the primaries.

He’s staked his chances on the hope that no other candidate will secure a majority of delegates before the convention in July.

During a contested convention, which Republican­s haven’t seen in decades, delegates are bound by the voting results from their states only on the f irst ballot. After that, they are freer to choose which candidate to support.

At that point, Kasich told reporters, “people are going to actually want to ask, ‘ Who do you think can beat Hillary Clinton?’ ”

He bests Clinton, the Democratic front- runner, in polls of hypothetic­al general election matchups, while Trump and Cruz fall short, although such surveys at this stage in a race have almost no predictive power.

Kasich says he’s not just f ighting for his own candidacy, but for his party’s chances in November. Without him at the top of the ticket, he said, Republican­s could face steep losses in lower- level races.

“I f ind myself in the strange position in some ways of being the stalwart of the Republican Party, to make sure we don’t lose the Senate and [ suffer] major losses in the House,” he said.

For Republican voters who have latched onto Kasich as the only reasonable candidate left in the race, his failures have been frustratin­g and confusing.

“I don’t understand it,” said Ted Setum, a 58- yearold attorney from Vernon, a small town outside Milwaukee. “The American people say they don’t like negative campaignin­g, but that’s all they’ve gotten.”

“I hit my mute button four times” during one of the televised debates, he said. “I just couldn’t stand it anymore.”

Kasich’s supporters have been turned off by Trump’s rhetoric while bemoaning his constant media attention.

“Trump is too controvers­ial,” said Ed Cooper, 82. “He’s got to think before he talks. Maybe because he talks before he thinks is why he’s in the paper all the time.”

Even as Kasich has ramped up his criticisms of Trump, he’s still campaignin­g with the type of humor that makes young children roll their eyes at the parents. On Wednesday he declined frozen custard during a campaign stop in a Milwaukee suburb because, he said, “I have a young, beautiful, smart wife. I have to stay fit.”

He bantered with a customer about golf swings, demonstrat­ing how players should roll their wrists.

A woman praised his stance on immigrants who are in the country illegally — Kasich wants a path to legalizati­on instead of deportatio­ns — by saying he’s treating them “like human beings.”

Kasich responded, “How should we treat them, like widgets?”

His campaign had emailed supporters to let them know Kasich would be stopping at the restaurant, and several showed up to thank him for running a more positive campaign than his opponents.

Bennett Whitnell, 29, said Kasich should stick it out until the convention.

“Until somebody wins the nomination, you haven’t lost the nomination,” he said.

Whitnell added, “I’m with him until the wheels fall off.”

 ?? James Robinson
PennL i ve. com ?? OHIO GOV. John Kasich campaigns Friday in Pennsylvan­ia, one of the late- April primary states in which he likes his chances. His Wisconsin prospects look dim.
James Robinson PennL i ve. com OHIO GOV. John Kasich campaigns Friday in Pennsylvan­ia, one of the late- April primary states in which he likes his chances. His Wisconsin prospects look dim.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States