WASHINGTON - There was a point when future Gov. Tim Pawlenty thought then-Gov. Jesse Ventura was actually going to hit him. "He's gonna smack me," Pawlenty, who was then the Minnesota House Majority Leader, recalls in his new book, scheduled for release next week.
Ventura, enraged at Pawlenty's quip that Ventura had "left the taxpayers behind enemy lines," had driven from his home to Pawlenty's office and shut the door behind him.
"I was in the military," Ventura shouted, "and we don't leave anybody behind enemy lines." Pawlenty promptly apologized.
"Sometimes an apology is a sign of strength," Pawlenty concludes in the book, "Courage to Stand," which recounts his journey from a working-class youth in South St. Paul to eight years as governor and, now, possible GOP presidential candidate.
The 301-page book, rolling out Tuesday in a national tour, provides a gauzy look at his years tromping around the now-vanished stockyards of South St. Paul, where he was raised by a pious mother who died young and a hard-working, truck-driving dad.
It ends with a withering rebuke of President Obama, laying the fiscally conservative groundwork for a potential Pawlenty platform. "The candidate who promised to change the way Washington worked has only made things worse as President," Pawlenty concludes.
Pawlenty's memoir might be a familiar story to Minnesota readers, but not to others around the nation to whom the former governor needs to introduce himself if he is to gain traction in the 2012 presidential contest.
In the spirit of revelation, the autobiography provides some heretofore undisclosed looks behind the scenes, from the "bizarre" Ventura encounter to the "potentially life-altering" moments in 2008 when GOP presidential candidate Sen. John McCain passed over Pawlenty to name then-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate.