who left their kitchens’ to support him Kasich thanks women
Ohio
Gov. John Kasich faced some real-time criticism on the campaign trail
in Virginia on Monday, when he praised the support he once received from
women “who left their kitchens” to support him the first time he ran
for public office.
“How
did I get elected?” the Republican hopeful asked a crowd at George
Mason University in Fairfax. “We just got an army of people, who — and
many women — who left their kitchens to go out and go door-to-door and
to put yard signs up for me.”
Kasich was elected to the Ohio state senate in 1978.
“All
the way back, when, you know, things were different,” he said. “Now,
you call homes and everybody’s out working. But at that time, early
days, it was an army of the women that really helped me get elected.”
Later,
in a Q&A with the audience, a woman who identified herself as a
nursing student at the school prefaced a question by chastising the Ohio
governor for his remarks.
“Your
comment earlier about the women coming out of the kitchen to support
you — I’ll come support you, but I won’t be coming out of the kitchen,”
she said, to applause.
“I gotcha, I gotcha,” Kasich replied.
Gov. John Kasich of Ohio addresses a town hall event in Fairfax, Va., on Monday. (Photo: Jim Bourg/Reuters)Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols tried to downplay the governor’s comments.“John Kasich’s campaigns have always been homegrown affairs,” Nichols said in a statement to NBC News.
“They’ve literally been run out of his friends’ kitchens, and many of
his early campaign teams were made up of stay-at-home moms who believed
deeply in the changes he wanted to bring to them and their families.
That’s real grassroots campaigning, and he’s proud of that authentic
support. To try and twist his comments into anything else is just
desperate politics.”Kasich himself later apologized.“Sure,
I’m sorry,” Kasich told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer. Anybody who’s offended, of
course. I’m not — look. Of course, I’m more than happy to say I’m sorry
if I offended somebody out there, but it wasn’t intended to be
offensive.“"Sometimes
when you operate on the high wire without a net, you’ll fall off and
not say things exactly the way you want to,” he said. “But let me be
clear: The beginning of my campaign for public office, I did town halls.
Except they were in people’s homes. They were at breakfast tables, they
were during — at evening when we had coffee, and I recruited people.
And I want to be clear: We had a lot of women that played a major role
in my political campaign.”On this point, Kasich appears to be right. In
1978, when Kasich mounted his state senate run, just 33 percent of
women aged 16 to 64 worked full-time in the United States, according to a survey published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In 2013, that figure was over 53 percent.And
women continue to volunteer at a higher rate than men “across all age
groups, educational levels and other major demographic
characteristics,” according to a BLS report released last year. About 28 percent of women volunteered in 2014, the survey found, compared to 22 percent of men.Still, it’s not the first time the Ohio Republican’s tongue has gotten him into trouble this cycle.
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