On page 237 you list four questions
on the minds of Wisconsin voters.
Two of the four involve jobs.
Why does your book not mention your
2010 campaign goal of creating 
250,000 new private sector jobs
by the end of the first term.
Walker: Yeah, legitimate question,
I'm very proud of that, uh, 
of that pledge in my campaign and I'm
committed to it and I'll come back 
and touch on where we're at in
a second, but the reason for the book, 
uh, is simple.
This is not a biography,
this is not a tell-all, 
this is not the comprehensive review
of Scott Walker's life and career, 
this is really the story of our reforms
which are unique to Wisconsin.
Which is a story I thought would be
interesting, it's the same reason with, 
there are similar reasons,
I shouldn't say the same, 
to when Steven Spielberg made the movie
Lincoln, he didn't take the book 
Team of Rivals and cover the whole book.
He took a piece of it,
the 13th amendment, 
which was one of the more compelling
parts of, of that book 
and made that into the movie.
That's what we did with the book.
We took one part of our story that
we thought was the most compelling 
and most interesting to the people
of the state and to the people 
of the country.
Per the 250,000 jobs,
we're very committed to it. 
The reason I picked that pledge in the
first place was because when I ran for 
governor I saw the devastation in
the last term before I was governor.
I saw that fact that in total under
Jim Doyle, we lost more than 133,000 
jobs in this state and what that meant.
Not just for the people who lost
the jobs but for their families 
and for communities.
And so I set a very ambitious,
very aggressive goal of helping 
the people in the state by 2015,
create 250,000 jobs.
I'm still committed to going down
that path because I want to not only 
make up for the jobs we lost under
the old policies that failed, 
but do even more to set us up for the
future so that we're in a much better 
position, no matter what happens
on a national stage.
