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New Bush e-book details his days as Florida governor

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MIAMI (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush on Monday released his long-planned e-book, "Reply All," a selection of email exchanges with everyday Floridians, journalists and others during his two terms as Florida governor.

Bush's publication of the 730-page digital book comes as he attempts to reset a campaign hobbled by stagnant poll numbers, a fundraising slowdown and a poor debate performance. On Monday, Bush officially begins his "Jeb Can Fix It" tour in Tampa, pitched as the start of his campaign comeback.

The e-book covers his two terms as governor, 1999-2007, when he carried a Blackberry at all times, spending 25 to 30 hours a week emailing and responding to a diverse range of people through his public and personal email account. The Blackberry was included in Bush's official portrait as governor.

Bush told NBC's "Meet the Press" Sunday that the e-book is "really the essence of the servant leadership that I had as governor of this state."

Since launching his presidential campaign in June, Bush has repeatedly pointed to his record and experience as governor to sell voters on why he should be the GOP's next nominee.

The first chapter, "This is Exhilarating," opens with his inaugural address on Jan. 5, 1999. The book ends with a chapter titled "This Job Gives Me Great Joy!"

The book includes the saga of Elian Gonzalez, the 5-year-old boy returned to Cuba more than a year after he was found clinging to an inner tube off the Florida coast when his mother and others fleeing Cuba drowned trying to reach U.S. soil. He wrote one constituent that the case "should not be looked at from a political perspective," but what's in the child's "best interest."

On the 2000 presidential election recount, Bush wrote: "As governor I was somewhat embarrassed about how difficult the recount became. Who had ever heard of 'hanging chads?" The razor-thin margin in Florida between his brother, George W. Bush, and Vice President Al Gore, led to a contested outcome resolved before the U.S. Supreme Court.

More typical were emails with everyday Floridians like a woman complaining in 1999 about problems caused by tractor-trailers on I-75 and a man outraged in 2006 over the state's skyrocketing homeowner insurance rates.

He also shared his mixed feelings on receiving an email from a 32-year-old black single mother who praised him at the end of his gubernatorial tenure, but said she was unconvinced he cared about African-Americans.

"All people matter to me and I have tried as hard as I can to prove that," Bush replied.

He also included email exchanges with current GOP rival and fellow Floridian Marco Rubio.

"I couldn't resist ribbing my friend Marco Rubio just a little," wrote Bush in a 2006 email when Rubio's office responded to his email with an automated reply. Rubio was House speaker at the time.

"Automated response!!! ...," Bush wrote back with 26 exclamation points.

Rubio wrote back: "Even the most innovative among us need time to make dramatic changes like getting rid of the auto response!"

In the final chapter, Bush rejects talk of a Bush dynasty in an email to the conservative Weekly Standard's Fred Barnes and said: "I am not big on talking about dynasties because I don't think they reflect the service of my granddad, father and brother's public service. It is not the motivating factor," he wrote. "It is not who we are."