Skip to comments.
"Every Other Monday" By John Kasich
Townhall.com ^
| June 18, 2010
| Hugh Hewitt
Posted on 06/18/2010 8:18:50 AM PDT by Kaslin
It is hard to find anyone who doesn't like John Kasich. The ebullient former congressman from the Columbus Ohio area spent nearly twenty years making a mark in the House of Representatives as an expert of the budget, ran a principled campaign for the GOP nomination for president in 2000 to underscore his concerns on federal spending (prophets are never heeded in time) and then had a great run as a Fox News Channel host and commentator.
Last year Kasich decided to try and help his beloved Buckeye State and launched a run for governor against Ted Strickland, the affable but hapless career pol who has presided over an economic bleed out that continues despite promises of massive help by President Obama when, as a candidate for president, he stumped the key swing state asking for a chance to show what a united Democratic Washington could do for the industrial Midwest.
Kasich campaign is formidable, and the most recent polling puts him five points ahead. Kasich is teamed at the top of the Ohio GOP ticket with a former colleague from the House, Rob Portman, who is favored to keep George Voinovich's Senate seat in Republican hands. The two of them present the GOP's best face to voters: Earnest, smart, optimists who got into politics just as Ronald Reagan came to D.C. and who are now at the top of their games and ready to contribute urgently needed leadership at the state and federal level.
This is a great situation for a candidate like Kasich, and just as many candidates have done, he has authored a book.
Except
Every Other Monday: Twenty Years of Life, Lunch, Faith and Friendship is unlike any other candidate's book that I have ever read.
Every Other Monday is Kasich's spiritual autobiography, or more accurately, a biography of the small group he and seven other men put together in 1987 to discuss the biggest issues of life using the Bible as their guide. The group has grown over the decades into a cornerstone of the lives of the men who participate in it, a rock on which they have all stood through some very tough times and some deeply difficult circumstances.
It has also been the source of joy, friendship and meaning, and Kasich's "mere Christianity" has deepened and matured through the hundreds of sit-downs with ordinary believers grappling with both Old and New Testaments. Kasich's spiritual journey began after his beloved parents were killed by a drunk driver a quarter century ago, and the path forward for him hasn't been easy or obvious.
I heard of the book this past Monday, ordered it up on my Kindle and read it over the next two days. I asked Kasich to come on the radio show Thursday which he did, and my first question was probably the question most of my D.C. audience on WRC AM 1260 had even if not the first question all of the other listeners across the country would have had: What did your campaign people think about putting out a book like this in the middle of the campaign?
"John," I said "this is a very good book that could be put to very bad use by political opponents. I can see the direct mail now: 'Kasich an expert on greed and envy! Admits to meeting with co-conspirators every other week." I was laughing, but there was a point to the question --candidates don't often talk about their inner lives of faith because such disclosures can and have been used against them in the rough and tumble world of politics.
Kasich's answer was immediate: He'd agreed to write the book before he knew he was going to run for governor. It was an important project to him and he wanted to honor his commitment. He trusted readers and voters would understand.
I think they will. Certainly anyone who has ever been in a small group will identify with the stories in Every Other Monday, and pastors will celebrate that a high profile guy like Kasich has endorsed the approach that has been near the core of American Christianity for many years.
Even cynics and non-believers will find it hard to fault Kasich's account of how life is lived over decades because everyone experiences the same set of ups and downs, great joys and sudden shocks, and Kasich's connecting them to Scripture is not shocking or salacious, only unconventional for a politician. It is also inspiring and encouraging.
Every Other Monday may prompt many other men to seek out or form such groups, and if it does it will be a hugely significant book unlike most candidate books. If it has any impact on the race for Ohio's statehouse, it will be positive, for it is impossible to put down without concluding that John Kasich is exactly who he says he is and that that guy is the same guy you have seen occasionally on your television screen for the past few years --open, energized and upbeat. Every Other Monday is in fact an explanation for Kasich's approach and attitude, an unintentional but powerful marker of authenticity and humility in an age when very few elected officials have that particular sort of credibility.
Even if you are as far from belief in God as anyone you know, give Every Other Monday a shot. We would all be much better off if more elected officials met in more such groups and asked more such questions. In fact, send a copy via Amazon to your congressman or senator or state legislator. It might be exactly what they, and we, so desperately need right
TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: fraud; gungrabber; johnkasich; kasich; lettercarriersson; liar; traitor
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-69 next last
1
posted on
06/18/2010 8:18:50 AM PDT
by
Kaslin
To: Kaslin
Remind me again of the Kasich connection to Congressman Conditt and the “swinging parties” !! Time seems to have erased the details.
2
posted on
06/18/2010 8:29:46 AM PDT
by
Froggie
To: Froggie
Remind me again of the Kasich connection to Congressman Conditt and the swinging parties !! Time seems to have erased the details. If you're going to throw that kind of accusation out there, you should provide the details yourself.
3
posted on
06/18/2010 8:41:35 AM PDT
by
nina0113
To: Froggie
Can you post the proof if you have it, and I mean from a legitimate source not a tabloid
4
posted on
06/18/2010 9:02:22 AM PDT
by
Kaslin
(Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
To: nina0113
5
posted on
06/18/2010 9:03:01 AM PDT
by
Kaslin
(Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
To: Kaslin
I remember Congressman Kasich in the ‘94 takeover. He is (and I guess still is) a leader of the Repub party.
6
posted on
06/18/2010 9:08:24 AM PDT
by
VRW Conspirator
(Government does not solve problems; it subsidizes them. - Ronald Reagan)
To: Kaslin
Strickland got the endorsement from the NRA this week.
To: Kaslin
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1992371/posts
You might also like to check out Joe Hallett,lefty so called journalist.
Agenda, everyone has an agenda. Nothing wrong with that.....I also have an agenda, check out all journalist and their agenda.
BTW, I first did a search on Kasich and Condit..........that led me to Joe Hallett.
8
posted on
06/18/2010 9:18:24 AM PDT
by
BARLF
To: VRW Conspirator
Kasich’s still refusing to release his income tax returns.
To: VRW Conspirator
Yeah. Back when he voted for the semi-auto gun ban?
To: Deadeye Division
John Kasich released his
2008 tax return. What more could a reasonable person want.
11
posted on
06/18/2010 9:25:18 AM PDT
by
NeoCaveman
("There is no more money. Period. We are BROKE." - Lurker 5/21/10)
To: Deadeye Division
Yeah. Back when he voted for the semi-auto gun ban?Back in 1993 or so.
In the mean time he went on to get their endorsement and A ratings as a congressman in the late nineties. he has admitted that that vote was a mistake. He also has a pro-gun running mate, while Ted Strickland's last and current runningmates are both anti second amendment.
12
posted on
06/18/2010 9:27:00 AM PDT
by
NeoCaveman
("There is no more money. Period. We are BROKE." - Lurker 5/21/10)
To: NeoCaveman
Guess the National Rifle Association didn’t fall for Kasich’s little pro-gun masquerade this time. He’s a liar.
To: Froggie
If you don’t live in Ohio I suggest you keep your nastiness to yourself.
To: NeoCaveman
The IRS makes me file every year.
To: Deadeye Division
The IRS makes me file every year. What, are you seriously concerned that he hasn't filed with the IRS every year?
16
posted on
06/18/2010 9:56:20 AM PDT
by
NeoCaveman
("There is no more money. Period. We are BROKE." - Lurker 5/21/10)
To: NeoCaveman
He has permitted a select few in the media to view his 2009 return, but he hasn’t released it.
To: Froggie
Wasn’t the question of Kasich’s sexuality raised in an attempt to damage him with conservative voters back when he was in congress? Something about the question of the propriety of bachelor Kasich sharing a Washington townhouse with his male chief-of-staff for several years while the staffer drew a large government salary?
To: Deadeye Division
He has permitted a select few in the media to view his 2009 return, but he hasnt released it. I didn't even know if his 2009 was done or not. Lot of people file extensions. Maybe that is the hold up.
I actually find it humorous that the guy is getting static for having income made in the private sector unlike his opponent.
19
posted on
06/18/2010 10:00:54 AM PDT
by
NeoCaveman
("There is no more money. Period. We are BROKE." - Lurker 5/21/10)
To: Deadeye Division
You got a link on that?
The only rumors I remember where that when he was single he dated a lot of women.
20
posted on
06/18/2010 10:02:15 AM PDT
by
NeoCaveman
("There is no more money. Period. We are BROKE." - Lurker 5/21/10)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-69 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson