Running to the left of many of his GOP presidential rivals on issues like abortion and immigration, Ohio Gov. John Kasich on Wednesday made his pitch to New Hampshire voters as a relatively moderate Republican who would reach across the aisle to balance the budget, slow the growth of Social Security and Medicaid and secure a path for Americans to find meaning and happiness.
The White House hopeful, who entered the presidential race just last month, is expected to pin much of 2016 prospects on the Granite State, where voters typically care less about hot-button social issues than those in the first-in-the-nation nominating state of Iowa. At a town hall Wednesday in Salem, Kasich attempted to craft a kind of “big tent” message that could pose a viable threat to former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush — the presumed choice of establishment Republicans.
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Highlighting his record in Congress, where he was able to balance the budget for four years and create a $5 trillion surplus under Democratic President Bill Clinton, Kasich advocated a bipartisan approach to solving the nation’s most pressing problems.
“Any Social Security plan, Medicaid plan has to have some bipartisan support,” Kasich said. He added that the same was true of the immigration debate, which has recently been dominated by questions about whether presidential candidates would end birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants born in the United States.
Kasich, who used to be in favor of ending birthright citizenship, now opposes the idea along with Bush and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. He also supports a pathway to legalization for undocumented immigrants, putting him squarely at odds with GOP front-runner, Donald Trump, who this week proposed deporting all 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the U.S.
“We’re not going to fix the immigration problem without having both parties to fix it,” Kasich said. “I’m a conservative with conservative principles, but you just can’t do it alone.”
Asked about his position on abortion, Kasich again separated himself from many of his rivals by saying that though he has “always been pro-life,” he does believe there should be exceptions in the cases of rape, incest or a woman’s life endangerment. On Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court decision that guaranteed a woman’s right to have an abortion, Kasich said: “Obviously, it’s the law of the land now and we live by the law of the land.”
An awkward moment came during the Q&A when a woman pressed Kasich on how he would protect Social Security.
“You’re cutting me off very quickly. Understand what I’m trying to say,” the woman said, “I want to see what your plan is. I admire you. I like you.”
Kasich deftly eased the tension with a hug. “She’s steamed up and I don’t blame her,” he said. Although he offered little in the way of policy specifics about his Social Security plan, Kasich did say that “we can’t turn our backs on poor people.”








