On the day that Donald Trump lodged his toughest attack yet on rival John Kasich, the Ohio governor defended himself in an MSNBC town hall, saying that “wallowing in the mud with Donald is not what I think is a successful strategy.”
Trump’s campaign is airing an advertisement on Ohio television accusing Kasich of being an “absentee governor” and hitting him for his time as a managing director at Lehman Brothers.
“I will say one thing about Lehman Brothers,” Kasich shot back. “I ran a two-man office in Columbus, Ohio. And if I bankrupted Lehman Brothers from a two-man office, I should have been selected pope, not run for president.” The crowd chuckled. “That’s like blaming a car dealer in Lima for the collapse of GM,” Kasich continued.
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 11, 2016
Kasich was speaking at a wide-ranging MSNBC town hall with Willie Geist and a crowd of constituents at Lima Pallet Company in his home state, where he addressed questions from social security to ISIS to higher education to guns.
Kasich laughed off a statement from Geist that Trump has previously suggested Kasich would be a good vice president.
“He’d better not say that in front of my wife,” Kasich quipped, adding “I’m serious.”
Kasich gave his standard answer to the vice president question, stating: “First of all, I believe I’ll be the nominee. I have the second best job in America. Number one is president. Number two is governor of Ohio. And I love being governor of Ohio.”
When pressed on whether he would accept Trump’s vice presidential nomination if offered, Kasich avoided a direct answer, saying, “I’m going to be the Republican nominee after we win Ohio and finish the rest of the country.”
Earlier Friday, news broke that the Rubio campaign would be okay with“releasing” their supporters in Ohio to vote for Kasich, since Kasich has a better chance at beating Trump in the winner-take-all state on Tuesday, therefore preventing Trump from gathering more delegates to get closer to clinching the nomination. But Kasich did not reciprocate the offering for his supporters in Florida.
“Should I tell my voters to not vote for me?” Kasich asked. “I should tell my voters, don’t vote for me, go vote for somebody else?”
“Well that’s what the Rubio campaign suggested,” Geist responded.
“That’s kind of nuts,” said Kasich. “That’s something that a politician would do. I’m not going to tell my voters, go vote for somebody else. You know what else? I don’t think that I have to tell them anything. Let them figure it out. But I mean, would that be the most bizarre thing? ‘You like me but please don’t vote for me. Go vote for somebody else.’ Let’s just let it all run its way.”









