Kasich: Trump Plan to ‘Round up 11 Million People’ Is ‘Ludicrous’
Making his best Grumpy Cat face, President Obama asked, “Why is it that Republican politicians are so down on America?”
Kasich has an excellent reputation for developing Ohio’s economy.
Much of the debate focused on money, taxes and the national debt.
That kind of statement can really get on a body’s nerves.
When served Mr. Trump’s comments underhanded, like a slow-pitch softball, Mr. Kasich didn’t unload.
“During the mid-to-late-1990s, Kasich and Sanford were the genuine articles – emerging as budget-hawking, liberty-loving lawmakers who lent ideological legitimacy to the 1994 ‘Republican Revolution, ‘” we wrote not long ago. “Of course we need a wall but the idea we’ll deport all these people, it’s ludicrous and everybody knows it”. They ran on them in 2008. They’re running on them now: More tax cuts for the folks at the very top – although there is no economic evidence to show that that would grow the economy, they say that’s going to grow the economy. “Nobody believes it, no economists think it, but they insist on it”, he said, according to a White House transcript. “I’d be like, ‘I’m ready, darling, let’s go!” he said.
At a rally Tuesday in his hometown of Westerville, Ohio, Republican presidential candidate John Kasich gave a possible preview for his performance in Wednesday’s national debate – calling his far-right competitors in the race, particularly Ben Carson and Donald Trump, completely insane.
Kasich began by talking about all the people he’s met on the campaign trail, particularly in the early state of New Hampshire.
Since becoming governor of Ohio, Kasich has rewarded his old firm with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of tax breaks.
While he said that he is not yet prepared to pick a candidate to endorse, Carroll claims he will fully support whoever the eventual nominee is, even if that person turns out to be someone with little political background like Trump or Carson. That day can’t come fast enough for a lot of us.