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John Kasich turned down ‘most powerful’ VP slot from Trump, sources say

Posted at 6:45 PM, Jul 20, 2016
and last updated 2016-07-20 18:50:09-04

Donald Trump’s son tried to entice John Kasich with a position as the most powerful vice president in history, but he turned it down, multiple sources close to the Ohio governor told CNN Wednesday.

Kasich would have been in charge of all domestic and foreign policy in a Trump White House, Kasich sources said.

But it also is the clearest sign yet that the animosity between both the Kasich and Trump campaigns will likely continue, unhindered as Donald Trump delivers his biggest speech yet Thursday.

Trump denied ever personally asking Kasich to be his running mate in a tweet.

“John Kasich was never asked by me to be V.P. Just arrived in Cleveland – will be a great two days!” Trump tweeted.

A Trump aide also dismissed the news, which was first reported by The New York Times Wednesday.

“Completely false. His vetting read like a trashy novel,” the aide said, when asked by CNN about the reports.

The Trump campaign compiled a dossier on Kasich, but never actually vetted him.

A source close to Kasich responded by saying, “Their comments are demonstrably false given the effort they put forward — and offer they made — to get Kasich to join the ticket. They must be confusing it with the file on Manafort, which must read like a Russian novella.”

The vice presidential back-and-forth began when Donald Trump Jr. reached out to top Kasich adviser John Weaver shortly after Kasich dropped out of the race in May.

Weeks later Trump and Kasich spoke on the phone and afterward Weaver sent Trump’s campaign chairman Paul Manafort Kasich’s “Two Paths” speech — a pretty clear signal Kasich had no interest, a Kasich source confirms.

A separate Kasich source says there were also separate instances of Trump allies reaching out to Kasich allies asking whether the Ohio governor might consider the VP slot.

Manafort also described the vice president role in a Trump administration as being similar to the COO of a company in an interview with the Huffington Post in May, a role that would appear consistent with the job being described by Kasich sources.

“He needs an experienced person to do the part of the job he doesn’t want to do. He seems himself more as the chairman of the board, than even the CEO, let alone the COO,” Manafort said.

Long before Trump settled on Indiana Gov. Mike Pence for his running mate, top Trump aides viewed Kasich as their best bet for winning the White House in November.

But Kasich has remained steadfast in his opposition to Trump, following a vicious Republican primary which tore the party in pieces.

The Republican National Committee and the Trump campaign launched a concerted and sometimes public effort to woo Kasich back into the fold ahead in the weeks before the convention. But Kasich rebuked their advances.

This week relations between the two camps have grown even more strained after Manafort told MSNBC that Kasich was “embarrassing his state” by skipping the convention.

Kasich has been trolling the convention in his home state all week — attending fundraisers and talking with delegates everywhere in Cleveland except The Quicken Loans Arena itself.

That was enough Wednesday for Steve Stepanek, co-chairman of the Trump campaign in New Hampshire, to call on delegates to boycott Kasich’s speech to the New Hampshire delegation.

“Gov. Kasich has refused to endorse Donald Trump, he refused to welcome us as Republican delegates to his great state of Ohio. He’s refused to participate in the Republican National Convention, which I think is totally inappropriate,” Stepanek told CNN. “Since he’s refused to participate in the convention or endorse Donald Trump, I think its totally inappropriate to attend any event he is sponsoring.”

CNN’s Tom LoBianco and Cassie Spodak contributed to this report.