Mar 9, 2016

Cats For Kasich: Bo Glo on The Ronnie Re

Why Kasich is the unlikely linchpin in GOP’s plan to stop Trump

John Kasich spoke at the Lansing Brewing Company in Lansing, Mich., on Tuesday.
CARLOS OSORIO/ASSOCIATED PRESS
John Kasich spoke at the Lansing Brewing Company in Lansing, Mich., on Tuesday.
GROSSE POINTE, Mich. — At a town hall-style meeting here, John Kasich singled out a group of students in the audience and ruminated on the importance of standing up to bullies.
“The key to life is finding your purpose and doing it,” he said, walking over to them with a microphone in hand. “Sometimes it’s standing in between the person that’s being bullied and saying: ‘Stop it.’ That changes the world, you know that?”
Over the next week, the larger purpose of the Ohio governor’s own campaign is shaping up along similar lines: Mainstream Republicans want Kasich to be the person who stands up to the bully in the 2016 primary, Donald Trump.
The Ohio governor hasn’t won a single primary contest in 2016, and, before the ballots were counted in Michigan Tuesday, his delegate total was less than 10 percent of Trump’s. His only previous signs of strength have been second-place finishes in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Vermont. He is so far behind in the delegate count that he has virtually no chance of claiming the nomination — unless he somehow prevailed at a brokered convention.
Despite all that, the Republican establishment sees Kasich as the unlikely linchpin of its strategy to derail Trump. The party was counting on Kasich to use his Michigan performance Tuesday as a springboard to winning his delegate-rich home state of Ohio next week — denying Trump a big boost in delegates.
Trump prevailed in Michigan Tuesday night. Kasich and Senator Ted Cruz were battling for second place, according to early returns.
The real test for Kasich comes on March 15. Ohio and Florida are the key prizes among the six contests that day. It will be Kasich’s moment: The brunt of the argument for his candidacy so far is that he can deliver his home state.
“Our campaign strategy was built knowing that the nominating calendar is front-loaded to benefit the other candidates in the race, while it shifts more and more toward a Kasich candidacy the deeper we go into it,” wrote chief Kasich strategist John Weaver in a memo over the weekend.
Republican Party leaders panicked over a possible Trump nomination are desperately hoping Weaver is right.
To stem Trump’s accumulation of delegates and possibly block his path to the nomination, Republicans not only need Kasich to win Ohio, but also for Senator Marco Rubio of Florida to win his home state. If Trump wins both delegate-rich, winner-take-all states, he will be well on his way to accumulating the 1,237 delegates required and will be almost impossible to stop before the GOP convention in Cleveland.
Rubio is so far back in the polls in Florida that Kasich, who is running even with Trump in Ohio, has the better chance of making this novel strategy work.
“Kasich has no mathematical chance to get enough delegates to win,” said Scott Jennings, a Republican strategist who ran Mitt Romney’s 2012 operation in Ohio.
“Clearly his strategy is about forcing a contested convention, and getting it to the floor, and convincing delegates that putting an Ohio governor on the ballot is a smart way of winning the White House.”
Jennings added: “He thinks he’ll have more friends on the floor than Donald Trump.”
One of those friends is, oddly, Romney. The two had a tense relationship in 2012. But on Tuesday, Romney unleashed a robocall to Michigan voters, urging them to support Kasich.
Another theory about Kasich’s strategy goes like this: If he can’t beat Trump, he could always join him. In a contested convention, it’s possible that Kasich’s delegates — if added to Trump’s — would be enough to push Trump over the top and win the nomination. Under that scenario, the country could see him as a vice presidential running mate.
Kasich was first elected governor in 2010 and won reelection by a 30-percentage point margin. He’s stayed popular in his home state even as his ambitions broadened, enjoying a 62 percent approval rating as of October.
In this campaign, he’s tried to blaze a path as the reasonable adult who doesn’t roll in the mud with the other candidates. He’s the only candidate in the field who hasn’t mounted a sustained campaign of verbal insults against Trump, though his super PAC was among the first to run ads against him in Ohio and New Hampshire last year.
Trump has offered some kind words to Kasich — and tangled with him late last year only after reports that Kasich’s super PAC was preparing a larger onslaught of ads. The news stories prompted a tweet storm from Trump in which the GOP front-runner derided Kasich as a “dud” who wasn’t getting traction.
“I’m not engaging in the negative attacks,” Kasich told an audience in Michigan on Monday. “There’s a lot of reasons not to do it, but one of the reasons not to do it is because it obscures my purpose.”
So while Trump has grabbed attention with proposals to wall off Mexico and ban Muslims, Kasich’s biggest moment sprang from his capacity for empathy.
Last month at an event at Clemson University in South Carolina, a young man stood up and said his life has been difficult: An adult close to him — a “second father” — had committed suicide. His parents had recently divorced, and his father had lost his job.
“I was in a really dark place for a long time,” the man said. “I was pretty depressed. But I found hope. I found it with the Lord, and my friends, and now I’ve found it in my presidential candidate who I support. And I’d really appreciate one of those hugs you’ve been talking about.”
As the man spoke, Kasich stepped down off the stage and embraced him for a full 17 seconds, patting him on the back as the audience applauded.
In Michigan this week, Kasich was just as free with the hugs, reaching over a barrier to wrap his arms around a young woman who stood up to tell him she’d had a rough year.
“What you’re seeing is genuine and real,” said Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine, a Republican politician who has known Kasich for nearly four decades. “He has a real heart for the underdog.”
A pivotal part of Kasich’s gubernatorial record is his decision to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, accepting millions in federal funds that many conservative governors turned down as a way of protesting President Obama’s health care plan.
He’s defended his decision in religious terms. “When I get to the pearly gates, I’m going to have an answer for what I’ve done for the poor,” he said, according to local news reports.
Kasich championed a law to restrict collective bargaining among public service unions early in his tenure. The measure went to Ohio voters on a ballot, and they slapped it down.
On the campaign trail, he positions himself as the mature populist. “The people who need to have a voice are the ones who don’t have a lobbyist,” Kasich said earlier this week. “For all of you who feel like you’re being ripped off, I would give you a voice.”
He added: “I am not an order-taker for the establishment.” But, next week, if Kasich wins Ohio and Rubio loses Florida, the Ohio governor would be the last place the Republican establishment could turn.
Annie Linskey can be reached at annie.linskey@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @annielinskey.

copied from the bostonglobe.com

while Chloe's mom, Chloelouise, is devoted to and voting for Hillary Clinton, Chloe Louise Langendorf Louis is endorsing John Kasich as a reasonable leader for the Republican Party.


Cats for Kasich

Mar 7, 2016

Rust Belt Favorite John Kasich Beats Trump in Michigan Polls: Philly.com on the ronnie re--Cats for Kasich


GOP and the Kasich situation in Michigan



Attytood

SUPER SATURDAY? Really? Saturday's mish-mosh of primaries and caucuses has to go down as one of the most boring and predictable days of the 2016 campaign so far. On the GOP side, Donald Trump won the states where people think Barack Obama was born the Antichrist or in Kenya or both (Kentucky, Louisiana) while Ted Cruz rules the Bible Belt; the fist-shaking prairie populists voting for Bernie Sanders on the Democratic side are drowned out by near unanimous black support for Hillary Clinton in the South.
Meanwhile, the real bombshell of the campaign was buried . . . as usual:
A new ARG poll out of Michigan, which votes on Tuesday, found that Ohio Gov. John Kasich has inched ahead of Trump, 33 percent to 31 percent. Kasich had nearly doubled his support from the last poll, while their two rivals were far behind.
If Kasich can actually beat Trump in Michigan - a big "if" . . . we'll know in 48 hours - that could be, to coin a phrase, a game-changer for the GOP establishment. It could actually give the party elites a way out of the Trump fiasco, if they're smart, which of course we haven't seen so far.
If Kasich wins Michigan, he becomes the odds-on favorite to win the winner-take-all primary in his home state of Ohio on March 15, and could have a strong showing that night in Illinois as well. Most of the big Northern and Midwestern industrial states haven't voted yet.
But here's the thing: Marco Rubio, running the biggest joke of a presidential campaign this side of Pat Paulsen, needs to leave the race, ASAP. He has no chance at the nomination and will probably boost Trump by losing to him March 15 in Florida (also winner take all).
Pundits who see Trump's nomination as inevitable fail to notice that so far he has less than 50 percent of the pledged delegates. A three way race with Cruz as candidate of the evangelicals, Kasich as candidate of the Rust Belt and Trump as candidate of the GOP's lunatic core would ensure that no one gets the 1,237 delegates needed to win on the first ballot.
What then? A lot of delegates may be GOP establishment plants who can't wait to ditch Trump and go to the elite candidate - Kasich - on the second or third ballot. It's that simple - Trump denied. Would his supporters then "burn down Cleveland," as a couple of folks suggested to me on Twitter? Perhaps.
- Will Bunch








cats for kasich


Mar 2, 2016

Van Jones Tells The Truth About donald trump

via CNN

FIGHT!

03.01.16 8:18 PM ET

CNN Commentators Erupt During Super Tuesday Fight Over Trump

Liberal commentator Van Jones and Donald Trump defender Jeffrey Lord got a into a heated war of words during CNN’s Super Tuesday coverage.
With victories in at least six Super Tuesday states, Donald Trump got even closer to inevitability status on the Republican side of the presidential primary contest. The divisive ramifications of a potential Trump nomination could be felt across the country, including on CNN’s New York set.
Following Ted Cruz’s victory speech after winning Texas and the neighboring Oklahoma, commentators on both sides of the political spectrum began warning against the dangers of a President Trump. On the right, S.E. Cupp pointed out that Trump has defended both “Operation Wetback” and Japanese internment camps as not only reasonable solutions at their respective times but positive precedents for America’s future.
On the left, Van Jones went back to incidents like Trump calling for the execution of the ultimately exonerated Central Park Five and the “dark underside” that he is “whipping up and tapping into and pushing buttons that are very, very frightening to me and frightening to a lot of people.” In particular, Jones highlighted Trump’s recent wafflingabout the Ku Klux Klan.
In both cases, Jeffrey Lord, who has been CNN’s chief Trump defender for months, stood up for the Republican frontrunner unequivocally. Recently, Lord has been comparing the KKK’s embrace of Trump to Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s relationship with Barack Obama and highlighting the Klan’s historic associations with Democrats. But in Jones’s words, Wright “never lynched anybody, never killed anybody” and “never put anybody on a post.”
“You guys play these word games and it is wrong to do in America!” Jones said, getting more and more heated. “I don't care how they voted 50 years ago,” he said of the KKK. “I care about who they killed.”
Lord ultimately resorted to the argument that Jones was the one “dividing people” with his rhetoric. “We're all americans here, Van,” he said. “This is what liberals do. You are dividing people by race.”
“The Klan divides by race, the Klan killed people by race,” Jones shot back.
As the two men continued to go back and forth, CNN’s camera remained locked on them. Anchor Anderson Cooper didn’t dare interrupt the fight. It took David Axelrod with a bit of comic relief—“Well, I think this is going well”—to break the tension and move things along.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump has now swept the majority of states in the Deep South and generally dominated Super Tuesday's votes. Whether or not his tacit embrace of the KKK had anything to do with tonight’s victories, we will never know.

from yahoo news and thedailybeast.com





Chloe just loves Hillary