A Quote by John Kasich

Any politician who is not a unifier is not somebody that I want to be for. — © John Kasich
Any politician who is not a unifier is not somebody that I want to be for.
I want to explain to everyone that during election season, a politician is always short of time. We are thankful to any politician who takes out time for an interview.
We are living in a science-fiction nightmare where children are gasping for breath on bad-air days because somebody gave money to a politician. And my children and the kids of millions of other Americans can no longer go fishing and eat their catch because somebody gave money to a politician.
I'm not a politician. I don't want to be a politician, because politicians do what is politically expedient. I want to do what's right.
One of the most fascinating aspects of politician-watching is trying to determine to what extent any politician believes what he says.
I'm not a politician and don't want any part of politics.
What was I qualified to do to make a living? Nothing. You don't need qualifications as an actor or a politician. And I didn't want to be a politician.
You don't need qualifications as an actor or a politician. And I didn't want to be a politician.
I'm a politician, and as a politician I have the prerogative to lie whenever I want.
I am not a politician-type politician and I want to remain that.
I want to avoid sounding like I'm criticizing because I don't have all the facts in front of me yet. And I am trying to be a unifier.
The left portray Donald Trump as somebody that's a walking mental midget, that literally has no idea what he's done here by winning the presidency, that has no idea how to talk, has no idea how to behave. They continue to make the mistake of plugging him into their model. They're plugging him into what they think an accomplished politician is, and he's not that, he's never been that, and he's not going to be that. He doesn't want to a politician, successful or not. He is president and he's going to lead this country in the ways that he's being very open and honest about.
You should not want to be a politician because you want to be president. You should be a politician because you want to fix the world or represent a movement.
Voting for a politician is very different then saying you like somebody or don't like somebody.
It's not something that defines me. I'm not a half-Indian politician or a doctor politician or a gay politician for that matter... it is part of my character, I suppose.
I am an elected official, a politician who has been very successful in Washington, in city halls and state houses for my entire career. If somebody wants somebody who needs on-the-job training, then they will not be able to vote for me.
Obama has placed himself in perfect political position: he spent the 2008 campaign convincing the American people that he's a racial unifier rather than a divider, without any evidence to prove it.
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