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Kasich for America
Gov. John
Kasich’s presidential campaign announcement
Ohio State University, Columbus
(GOVERNOR KASICH): Wow. Listen, standing here with me, of course, are
the people who I have dedicated my life to—my sweet daughters, Emma and
Reese Kasich. I remember when they were born. Remember that,
Sweetie?
I kept saying to the doctor, "How is it going?" He's trying to deliver
two. Finally he looks me square in the eye and he said, "Can you shut
up? I'm a little busy right now." And they came out, and I could hold
them in the palm of my hand. It was so sweet. And so I, along with
Karen, have dedicated our lives to giving them a better life than we
were able to ever get from our parents. And you know what? They're
doing fantastic.
(Applause)
And my wife—pray for her, she's married to me. From the very tips of my
toes to the top of my head, I just love my wife so much—such a great
partner and such a great lady.
(Applause)
So I want to tell you that it's this whole business of the American
dream, isn't it, that we can all work to make sure the next generation
is going to be in a position of greater strength than what we received.
And I get my inspiration from the people who came before me. And I want
to tell you about a few of the ones that inspire me.
I'd like to start with my Uncle Steve. Uncle Steve was a tough guy, the
son of a coal miner, rough and gruff and tell is like it is and he
found himself at Iwo Jima. And he looked around during that battle and
he saw a lot of people dying.
Uncle Steve was not a churchgoing man, but in the middle of all the
violence and the blood and the death, he said to God, "If you take me
off this island, I will go to church every day for the rest of my
life." And he did.
And Uncle Steve. When Uncle Steve came home from the war, the brothers
all slept in the same room. They didn't have a lot. And Uncle George
told me that he would have nightmares and he would speak in Japanese,
and he told his brothers, "Never wake me—never wake me from that
nightmare because I don't know what will happen. Let me sleep and wake
up on my own."
And Uncle George, he's here today. He's right over here. He's 89 years
old.
(Applause)
I so love my Uncle George. He's the patriarch of our family. Uncle
George was in the infantry and he was scheduled to take a boat from
England to Belgium, but the division he was in couldn't all fit in the
boat. So they asked George to wait until the next day. Well, that boat
left England on its way to Belgium, and a submarine launched a torpedo
and sunk that boat and everyone on it perished.
The next day, Uncle George took another boat and he landed in France.
And he fought with great honor and he returned home and became a
guidance counselor and guided young people for the next 38 years of his
life. What a man.
(Applause)
And my father-in-law—we call him Popsy, Grandfather—joined the Marines
at the age of 17, wanted to serve his country.
But I guess most important—my mom and dad. You know, mom was—well, she
was a visionary. Didn't get the education—you know her mother could
barely speak English—but, boy, was she smart. And if you think I have
opinions, you never met my mom.
And my father, he was the mailman, they called him John the Mailman.
And when we laid my mother and father to rest there were countless
numbers of people who came and said, "John the Mailman—he watched out
for all of us." And they gave up so much, didn't take—I wish they had
spent more on themselves. No matter what you told them they were not
going to do it. Because it was all about the next generation. And
they're the ones that have inspired me. And all of you here
today—you're the same way, aren't you? You have the people who did so
much for you who are your heroes. They don't have to be famous. They're
people that you love and that you admire.
That American dream is pivotal for the future of our country, but I
have to tell you, there are a lot of people in America today who are
not sure that that American dream is possible, that that American dream
is alive. And I can understand their concerns.
You know, when I was a kid, you went out and you got a job and you
worked at that job your entire lifetime. You got your health care and
retirement and everything was good. Today you could be a 51-year-old
man and one day after serving and doing everything the right way,
somebody walks into your office and says, "I'm sorry, but we don't need
you anymore." Can you imagine that conversation? Could you imagine that
dad while he's driving home or that mom when she's driving home? They
lose confidence. They wonder what their future is. Can they get another
job? Can they support their family? Will anybody be there to help them?
Or how about moms and dads today? They send their kids to college. Many
of these young people bringing up massive amounts of debt trying to get
an education and they're living in the attic. And mom and dad are
wondering will they get a job? Will they pay their bills? What kind of
future will they have?
Or at the same time we can also think about what all of us fear greatly
and that is the problems of bad health. Can I afford those expensive
drugs that I need to survive? What is it going to cost me to get
treatment not just for myself, but for one of the loved ones in my
family? Will I be bankrupted and lose everything I have, everything
I've worked for? It's a real fear.
Or the fear of the tsunami of drugs. It's everywhere, isn't it? The
kids that are here—and there are many of them—don't do drugs. Don't put
that big 1,000 pound pack on your back and keep you from your God-given
purpose. But all moms and dads worry that those drugs will wash away
our own neighborhoods and maybe wash away our children.
And how about those that struggle to make ends meet? There are some
people who just say, "Just work harder" or "pull yourself up by your
bootstraps." I believe in all that. Some people just don't have the
fortune that many of us have. They struggle. They struggle for a whole
lifetime and they worry that can they rise? Can they pull the rest of
their family members up the ladder? The promise of America and they
worry about it.
Or how about a member of the minority community—an African-American? Do
you wonder, "The system I think sometimes doesn't just work for me, but
sometimes I feel like that system works against me." You think about
the troubles that many of our African-Americans still face today in the
world where we have worked to provide equal rights and opportunities.
Sometimes they're not so sure. And I don't blame them.
Or how about all of us? We pick up the paper, it's Chattanooga, it's
Fort Hood, it's ISIS. Are we safe? Are we going to be safe to go to the
mall or safe to leave our homes?
These are the worries that many Americans have, but I have to tell you
as serious as these are—and they are very serious—we've had a lot
worse, much worse in this country. Think about it. The Civil War, do
you remember reading about it? It's not just neighbors fighting against
neighbors, but it was even family members—kin fighting against one
another and killing one another on a battlefield right in America.
How about the about the racial violence that we experienced in this
country? The early days of television when they put the dogs and the
gas and the batons on people of another color.
Or the world wars? Where many in our families never came home, leaving
widows and children without a dad.
Or the depression? The depression. Ask your grandfather, ask your mom
and dad about that depression. My father used to say that he'd go down
to the store and get some food for the family and the guy would say,
"We'll put it on your bill." There was no bill. That's what it took for
America to get through the depression.
And you all remember that crystal clear morning and the horror we felt
on 9/11. But guess what? We've always gotten through it because the
testing is what makes you stronger. It's the challenges that make you
better. I have lived through them and I have become stronger for them
and America has become stronger for them and here is how we've done
it—by staying together. Not by dividing each other, but by staying
together with our eyes on the horizon, with our eyes on the horizon
about the future.
(Applause)
We have a little town in Ohio called Wilmington. They followed that
formula. Let me tell you about these folks. They played by the rules,
worked every day, highly productive, teamwork. And one day an employer
said, "We're leaving. We're out of here." And thousands of
people—thousands of hard working, God-fearing people like your
neighbors went from getting a paycheck on a Friday afternoon to
visiting a food pantry so they could feed their kids.
I was down there in 2010 after this earthquake—economic earthquake hit
Wilmington. We had a campaign bus. My wife was with me. We walked
through that food pantry. We looked at the people—preachers and civil
servants and leaders and caregivers—they were at the food pantry but
had not lost any hope because they had their eyes on the horizon. We
got back on that bus. I will never forget it as long as I live. We got
back on that bus and I said, "Folks, do you understand?" Some of them
had been with me for a long time, so they got it, but some of the
others were rookies. I said, "Do you understand what we are doing
here?" This is not a political campaign." And by the way, neither will
this be—this is not a political campaign. "Did you see those people?
Did you see the tears in their eyes? Did you see them hugging their
children? Did you see them not hopeless? We're going join in and we're
going to help them, because it's our job and our mission as human
beings, as children of God to work with them to lift them."
And guess what?
(Applause)
And guess what? And in Wilmington today the sun is coming up. I told
them that the sun would come up again. It hasn't reached its zenith,
but the sun is rising. And the sun is going rise to the zenith in
America again. I promise you it will happen.
(Applause)
Listen, you know who does this? You see, it's you and me. It's teachers
and preachers, and moms and dads, and doctors, construction workers.
Like that sweet man in Brown County who saw his family washed away over
the weekend. Keep him in your prayers. Police, firemen, and people like
my dad, the mailman, John the Mailman, because we're the glue. We are
the glue that holds our country together.
As for me, as for me, I'm just trying to do my best. I came here to
Ohio State. I found myself on the 19th floor of one of those towers—you
can hit it with a stone from here. I had 15 roommates. The place was 23
floors high. The tower the next door was the same size. Ohio State can
be a pretty intimidating place. It is big. It is a big place. And I
left my dorm room, went down to the first floor, and I walked right
down the path to Ohio stadium. And it was a time when you could
actually walk in that stadium. They didn't have the one end closed in.
And I walked into that stadium—I swear this happened—and I walked right
to the 50-yard line. There was no one in the stadium that day, and I
looked around. All of those seats, those big structures that were
there, and I thought to myself, either this place is going to take me
down or I'm going to take it down, one way or the other. Either it was
going to beat me—you know, either it was going to beat me or it was
going to be a place—kids, because you'll face it someday—to help me
move forward.
You know what's amazing? I'm back here today. You could throw a stone
and hit that stadium or you could hit that dormitory so many years
later. And guess what? I am here to ask you for your prayers, for your
support, for your efforts, because I have decided to run for President
of the United States.
(Applause)
You know, they ask you all the time, like it's a trick question or
something. "Well, why do you want to do this?" Like they're going to
catch you. I mean, if you can't answer that question, you ought to be
back at the 50-yard line at Ohio Stadium wondering about your future. I
do this because, first of all, if we're not born to serve others? I
want you to think about this. If we're not born to serve others, what
were we born to do? I do this for my family, of course, for my sweet
family, for my neighbors, for my friends of many, many, many years,
many of whom are working with me today—30, 40 years later. I really do
it for everyone. And I have to humbly tell you—and I mean humbly tell
you—that I believe I do have the skills, and I have the experience.
(Applause)
I have the experience and the testing. The testing which shapes you and
prepares you for the most important job in the world, and I believe I
know how to work and help restore this great United States.
And I have to tell you it's a daunting challenge. I was at Wendy's on
Saturday up here at Hudson Avenue and two wonderful African-American
fellows were there and I was standing behind them. One said, “I don’t
know if I believe what I’m seeing but I believe that's Governor Kasich
standing behind me.” They said, “You better run.” Do you know what that
meant to me? Two African-American guys, one with a brace on his leg and
another one with a cane. And I said, “Well, you know, some people are
going to have a lot more money than I am,” and they said, “But you’ve
got statistics, you’ve got statistics.”
So some are going to ask, as they always have, why do you think you can
do this? You know, all of my life people have told me you can't do
something, okay? I'll tell you why, it's because I believe in the power
of very big ideas, big, bold ideas.
In 1976 I went out to the convention in Kansas City and not only worked
for Ronald Reagan, but I worked with Ronald Reagan, and I got to travel
with Ronald Reagan. Yeah, I actually knew the guy, okay, the real guy,
not from the history book. He lost at that convention. I had been
managing, I think, five states for him. You talk about lightning
striking me. I walked in and they said, “We’re one man short,” and
said, “Could you manage five states for the governor?” I said, “Of
course, I could.” I had no idea.
Well, he lost, as you know. And I was there when he met with his
closest advisors and he said, “We've lost the battle. We haven't lost
the war because I'll be back and I'm going to fix America with all of
your help.” And, of course he did.
And it further cemented my notion that big ideas change the world—big
ideas change the world.
(Applause)
So I came back here to Ohio and was charged up, and I was working as an
aide. And I remember meeting with one of my buddies and I said I think
I’m just going to run for the state Senate and beat that guy we've been
watching, and I remember he was drinking something and it fell on the
floor when I told him that. People—I was 24-and-a-half years old. I had
no relatives that lived in the state. I didn't really know anybody, but
I had a big idea. And you know what? We did. We went out and got moms
and dads, a lot of moms, who went door to door. And the weekend before
the election, one of the local newspapers said, “He's a fine young man
but has no chance to win.” Well, I won that election with the help of
the army of volunteers.
I went on to chair the Health Committee where I learned to work across
the aisle because the House was run by Democrats, and that's where I
learned that policy is far more important than politics, ideology, or
any of the other nonsense we see.
(Applause)
You know, they said it couldn't be done. We proved them wrong.
And then at the ripe old age of 30, I decided I'm going to run for
Congress. My mother and father are, like, “Johnny, what are you doing
now?” Well, they said I couldn't win, I was too young and, by the way,
I was going to run against an incumbent in 1982, which was the worst
year. We lost 26 Republican seats that year. I was going run against a
guy with his degree from Harvard. I knew I had an edge; clearly he
couldn’t have gotten in to Ohio State.
And in 1982 I was the only Republican in America to defeat a Democrat
all across this country. And guess what, here is the irony, I got to go
to Washington and work with President Ronald Reagan, you know? They
said it couldn't be done, but we proved them wrong again.
And then I got down to Washington and got on the Armed Services
Committee for 18 years. I found that these hammers and screwdrivers,
they cost thousands of dollars and it was taking the resources from the
people that needed it who were serving in the military. We were wasting
money and I said, “We need to clean this up,” and they're like, “You
know, come on, it's the Pentagon. You can't—forget about it, it can't
happen.”
Well, we passed some legislation and we made things right. We saved
money, we improved the system, and we helped the military. They said it
couldn't be done, and we proved them wrong again.
(Applause)
Let me be clear, our military must be improved. We need to—we need to
cut the bureaucracy, and strengthen our services. Now, I'm the
person—I’m a person that doesn't like to spend a lot of money, but in
this case, national security climbs to the very top of the heap because
we must be strong and must assume our role as leaders of the world.
(Applause)
So, six years after I got to Congress, I got on the Budget Committee.
And I remember going to the first few meetings, Bob [former Budget
Committee colleague Congressman Robert Walker (R-PA)]. It was terrible
and I was complaining at a gas station in Westerville, and I was
saying, “These people don't want to do anything.” And some guy walked
around the pump and looked me square in the eye and said, “If things
are so bad, what are you going to do about them?”
So I flew down to Washington and met with my staff, and I said, “We
should write a budget.” And they said, “There's, like, 100 people in
the White House working on it and probably 50 up here,” and I said, “I
know we're overstaffed, but if we stay out of our way we'll be able to
get this done.” We wrote a budget for the United States of America. And
why? It's not about numbers. It's about vision. It's about values. And
we do not have the right as grown-ups to ring up debts to suit
ourselves and pass them on to the next generation. We don't have that
right.
(Applause)
Ten years of my life I worked at this. My first budget was 405 to 30. I
had the 30. My staff was depressed. I thought we were doing pretty
well. We just kept at it and kept at it. And you heard my great friend
John, one of the smart—he’s a wonderful man. If John Sununu hadn’t come
to me and told he was going to help me in New Hampshire I wouldn’t have
done this. He is remarkable and we did it together. And the politicians
didn't care about—they didn't care about anything, about being
reelected. They cared about fixing America, Pat [Congressman Pat Tiberi
(R-OH)]. They cared about getting the budget balanced and getting it
going. They said it couldn't be done, too big, too hard, and we proved
them wrong again and we balanced that budget. We balanced it.
(Applause)
You want job creation? You balance the books. Am I right? You balance
the books. And if I'm President or maybe I should say when I am
President—
(Applause)
—I will promise you—I will promise you that my top priority will be to
get this country on a path to fiscal independence, strength, and we
will rebuild the economy of this country because creating jobs is the
highest moral purpose and we will move to get that done.
(Applause)
And, by the way, how about a little balanced budget amendment to the
Constitution so the Congress will start doing its job?
(Applause)
So I left. I left Washington and had a great time, you know? I worked
at Lehman Brothers and learned about businesses and went to Fox News
where I was a giant television star.
(Laughter)
I had a great time, but, you know, I had a calling. Here is how it
went—I didn't hear anything but it was clear to me—You’ve had an
amazing life. You have a lot of skills. You're going back. You're going
back. And I sensed it when I was on a trip. And I came back and called
my friends and said I guess we have to do this.
There were doubters. They said you haven’t been in politics in 10
years—in a decade—you have never run statewide and you haven't defeated
an incumbent in 36 years in Ohio, and incumbents don’t lose. So we put
together a vision and a team. They said it couldn't be done and we
proved them wrong again.
(Applause)
And then we took over the reins. We didn't go unprepared. We knew what
we wanted to do. I want to tell you. If I'm president I know what we
need to do, there's no confusion about that. I know what needs to be
done. I have been there at all levels. But we came in there, $8 billion
in the hole, a loss of 350,000 jobs. One guy said he gave a dollar to
double the rainy day fund. A lot of hopelessness here. Particularly
among the poor, the minorities. People said maybe Ohio's best days are
behind them. I thought that was baloney. I said, “We'll cut taxes and
get the budget balanced.” I said, “Are you kidding?”
So we went to work. And we didn't have to slash—we didn't have to slash
things. We had to use the 21st-century formula: improve things, make a
better product at a lower price, let mom and dad stay in the home
rather than being forced in a nursing home—let them stay in their own
home. And if we have to knock down the special interests to get it
done, so be it. That's what we did.
Now, today four-and-a-half years later, a billion in the hole—2 billion
surplus, a loss of 350,000 jobs—a gain of 350,000 jobs, and tax cuts of
$5 billion—the largest in the country.
(Applause)
And as I hope you all know, economic growth is not an end unto itself.
If you're drug addicted, we're going to try to rehab you and get you on
your feet. If you're mentally ill, prison is no place for you. Some
treatment and some help is where you need to be. You're the working
poor? We're going to give you an opportunity to take a pay raise and
not bang you over the head because you're trying to get ahead. We're
changing that system. If you have an autistic son or daughter, most of
them, they can’t get insurance. We'll work to make sure all of them
have it. If you're developmentally disabled, you're made in God's
image. They have a right to rise. They have a right to be successful.
(Applause)
And with all this, with all this, they said it couldn't be done. Guess
what, we proved them wrong again. And I'm going to take what we've
learned here in the Heartland, a band of brothers and sisters that I
work with every day, and we are going to take the lessons of the
Heartland and straighten out Washington D.C. and fix our country.
(Applause)
Well, you know, now they're going say, “Well, you know, nice guy or
good guy or not a good guy,”—whatever, whatever they're going to
say—“but I don't know if he can win.” With you, and you sweetheart,
okay, can you paint signs? And with all of you, together, we'll prove
them wrong again, won't we? We'll prove them wrong again.
(Applause)
So our team, we'll tame the bureaucracy, restore this common sense, get
rid of all the stupid rules. How about putting some people in the
government that understand job creators and respect them rather than
beating them down, how about that? How about some common sense? And
make America stronger, militarily.
Folks, here is the thing I want to say to you—and I said this at my
inaugural—some people think they just don't matter in this. Do you know
how wrong that is? And we’ve got this Holocaust memorial, and there's a
line etched in it that says, “If you save one life, you've saved the
world.” Do you believe that? Do you believe that?
(Applause)
You save one life, you save the world, and the Lord will record what
you've done for each other in the Book of Life.
Now we've got some values that we need to think about that can bring us
together. Folks, we're a divided country, but we can fix it. I'll tell
you what I think some of them are: personal responsibility. The dog ate
my homework went out in the fifth grade. Here is the thing: we own our
lives. I mean, if you're hurting, we'll help you. My mother used to say
that it is a sin not to help somebody who needs help, but it’s equally
a sin to continue to help somebody who needs to learn how to help
themselves. Personal responsibility needs to be restored in our country.
Teach our children resilience. Everybody doesn't get a trophy just for
showing up, folks. You know what resilience is? It's getting knocked
down—and I have been knocked down so many times—but getting knocked
down is not the problem. It's refusing to get up. We need to teach our
kids, teach our children about resilience and remind ourselves that
you're 51 years old and you lost your job. You're going to come back
stronger and better. We'll help you.
Empathy, this one is so important. I just would ask you to think, put
yourself in the shoes of another person. We're so quick to make
judgments today in our country. Don't walk so fast. Yesterday I was
coming downtown and there was a lady and she was older and she had a
cane and was barely walking. She was putting one foot in front of
another. I wanted to stop and just hug her, encourage her, people who
have not been dealt the best hand in life.
Yeah, we want to hold them accountable, but the Lord wants our hearts
to reach out to those that don't have what we have. I mean, that
shouldn't be hard for America. That's who we are. When people have
studied our country they have talked about our compassion. And we need
to bring it back. Empathy, don't be so quick to judge. Ok? Me too. Me
too.
And then teamwork, Tom Moe was up here. You know, he used to run the
veterans [Ohio Department of Veterans Services]. I call it the bright
arc of live. The man goes in the military, sits in the Hanoi Hilton, is
beaten all the time. He comes home, and I put him in charge of the
veterans. This is the beautiful arc of what's right. Tom had a little
code…
[Governor knocks on the podium]
I don't know where he is right now—here he is—and he tapped out a code
that kept them all together. And it was team that carried them through
the difficult time. Uncle George, it was team that helped you to be
successful. The Vietnam veterans and the Iraqi veterans and the
Afghanistan veterans…we do best…or the Depression, when we all hung
together. Teamwork, team, they're not the enemy, they're part of our
team. We can disagree, they're our team.
And then family, it's the building block of our culture. Let's
recognize it. And, of course, faith, and faith is simple for me. It's
about the dos, not about the don'ts. What it's really about is: God
didn't put us on the earth to take care of ourselves. He put us on the
earth to make things better.
And so there are some that will try to divide us, we see it all the
time. I don't pay attention to that nonsense. At the end of the day,
it's about being together because, you know, it says, “We the people…”
And, by the way, if you think that I or anybody who becomes President
or a big shot—we don't move America. Oh, we do our part, if we have
courage and intelligence, but it's all of us in the neighborhoods, in
the families, across the country, we're the strength and the glue.
Please, please, please don't lose sight of it.
As for me, I'm just a flawed man, a flawed man, trying to honor God's
blessings in my life. I don't even understand it. He's been very good
to me. And I want you to know that I will do my very best to serve you,
because you are in my mind's eye. What are you? Get up every day, go to
work, work hard, follow the rules, come home, spend time with your
family, and at night you go to bed and say your prayers for your
family, for your neighbors, and for our nation.
And, folks, as it has been said many times, the light of a city on a
hill cannot be hidden. The light of a city on a hill cannot be hidden.
America is that city and you are that light.
God bless you and God bless America.
(Applause)
Thank you all very much.
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