After finishing a surprising second to Donald Trump in Tuesday’s Republican primary in New Hampshire, Gov. John Kasich feels his campaign emphasizing the positive can stand up to Trump’s attacks on his closest rivals.
“Somebody wants to mess with me, they’re messing with the wrong guy,” Kasich told Matt Lauer and Savannah Guthrie on TODAY Wednesday. “I’m not gonna sit there and be a marshmallow and have somebody pound me. We’re not just gonna sit back and take a pounding from anybody, but at the same time we’re going to tell people what we’re for, and I think people really, really like it.”
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Kasich stunned some pundits by taking second with 15.9 percent of the vote behind Trump. NBC News reports Trump earned 35.1 percent of the votes in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary.
“I don’t think it was the faltering (of other candidates),” Kasich said about his second-place showing. “We were on our way up anyway. Secondly, I had a very positive message. As you know, I was the only one with a really positive message. I always felt that the light could overcome the darkness in a political campaign where we can say what we’re for — bringing families together, creating jobs, making sure that no one gets left behind.”
The Ohio governor said he was “gratified” after finishing ahead of Iowa caucus winner Ted Cruz (11.6%) as well as Jeb Bush (11.1%) and Marco Rubio (10.6%). His strategy of spending more time campaigning in New Hampshire than any other Republican candidate paid off with his strong showing.









