Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican, lectured congressional leaders of his party on Sunday for being shortsighted, disingenuous and, ultimately, doomed to be forgotten by history if they persist with their approach to health-care legislation.

โ€œSometimes my party asks too much,โ€ Kasich said on ABCโ€™s This Week, saying he and others would not be fooled by โ€œefforts to try to buy people offโ€ with little fixes to the Senate bill to increase spending to combat opioid addiction or give more financial support to low-income people seeking health coverage.

This is not the first time that Kasich has criticized the GOP for the health-care legislation they are trying to shepherd through Congress. Last month, he joined with two other Republican governors and four Democratic governors to urge the Senate not to reduce Medicaid coverage โ€” which the Senate bill contracts.

But Kasich stressed Sunday that โ€œitโ€™s not just Medicaid and the fact that thereโ€™s not enough money in Medicaid legitimately to treat peopleโ€ that has prompted his opposition to the bill.

โ€œItโ€™s the whole thing,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s the entire package, which I believe can and should be fixed.โ€

The sins of the health-care package Kasich has identified go right to the heart of the bill. If the Obamacare exchanges are collapsing, he stressed, โ€œyou canโ€™t also give people three or four thousand dollars a year and think they can buy an insurance policy.โ€

โ€œWhat kind of insurance policy can you buy at three or four thousand dollars a year?โ€ Kasich asked.

He also said that the latest proposal to inject the effort with money to combat opioid abuse โ€” $45 billion over 10 years โ€” was โ€œanemic. Itโ€™s like spitting in the ocean. Itโ€™s not enough.โ€

Kasich didnโ€™t reserve his harsh words only for the GOP โ€” he criticized Democrats, too, and politicians generally as being slaves to their party instead of working to improve the country.

โ€œNo one will ever remember youโ€ if you donโ€™t put the country first, Kasich warned members of Congress.

โ€œRight now, they donโ€™t want to concede anything,โ€ he concluded. โ€œRight now, theyโ€™re not ready, they are not ready to sit down and put the nation first in my opinion.โ€

Notably, Kasich did not direct the same sort of criticism at President Donald Trump, who he suggested would be open to negotiations with Democrats.

โ€œI think heโ€™d be fine with it,โ€ the governor said, noting that Trump is a real estate businessman and that โ€œnegotiation is part of their DNA.โ€