Is Scott Walker running? 5 quick takes from Wisconsin governor's memoir

Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin sounds a lot like a presidential candidate in his memoir, 'Unintimidated.' Here are five points in the book that amplify the Republican governor's particular lens on politics.

4. The opposition's fiscal irresponsibility is a moral failure

Morry Gash/AP/File
Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker reacts at his victory party on June 5, 2012, in Waukesha, Wis. Walker defeated Democratic challenger Tom Barrett in a special recall election.

$24.8 million. That’s how much money Wisconsin taxpayers spent in the recall election in which Gov. Scott Walker won his seat a second time – with more than 200,000 votes than the first time. Instead of splitting his party or turning the public against him, the unions' “smash-mouth tactics had the opposite effect,” the governor writes in his memoir.

Walker says that his reforms were needed (the state faced a $3.6 billion budget deficit when he took office) and that they worked (the state now enjoys a half-a-billion-dollar surplus) without raising taxes, slashing jobs, or harming public services. “We freed school districts from the stranglehold of collective bargaining rules – allowing them, for example, to buy health insurance on the open market and hire and fire teachers based on merit for the first time,” he writes.

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