Sen. Johnson holds first news conference since stroke

Sen. Tim Johnson
Sen. Tim Johnson at one of his first public appearances in South Dakota. He was at a meeting in Sioux Falls on water pipeline projects important to South Dakota in October of 2007.
MPR Photo/Cara Hetland

Sen. Tim Johnson began the conference call catching many people off guard.

"As I was saying," Johnson said, followed by a long pause.

It was his way of picking up right where he left off nearly a year ago, talking about things important to South Dakota. Except a lot has happened in a year.

Sen. Tim Johnson
Sen. Tim Johnson attended a meeting in Sioux Falls on water pipeline projects important to South Dakota in October of 2007.
MPR Photo/Cara Hetland

Johnson is still weak on his right side and uses a motorized scooter to get around the capitol. His speech is slow and deliberate and often slurred. But he slipped in light-hearted comments as he talked about the issues.

Create a More Connected Minnesota

MPR News is your trusted resource for the news you need. With your support, MPR News brings accessible, courageous journalism and authentic conversation to everyone - free of paywalls and barriers. Your gift makes a difference.

"While we often stop conference calls for a couple of weeks around the holidays, I wasn't expecting this much time away from you all," he said.

The dry sense of humor was a good sign to reporters who have covered the senator since he started out in the state legislature. Jerry Oster, news director at WNAX radio in Yankton said the senator's personality was evident.

"I was really pleased to hear his sense of humor right off the bat, saying 'I was so rudely interrupted a year ago.' And his other comment about 'Gee, we were talking about budget bills when I left and here we are talking about it again.' The Tim sense of humor which they told us was there, is still there," Oster said.

The omnibus spending bill is an issue Johnson hopes will be settled without cutting funding for the Lewis and Clark water pipeline and other issues important to South Dakotans.

Johnson on stage
Sen. Tim Johnson was wheeled onto the stage and stood up at the podium at is moment to address the crowd. His son, Brooks, is behind him.
MPR Photo/Cara Hetland

"The president is threatening to veto the omnibus because it spends too much money on projects like Lewis and Clark, education and law enforcement," Johnson said. "The president's budget will short change many of South Dakota's priorities."

Johnson sometimes struggled to verbalize his thoughts. He stumbled and paused and sentences often came to an abrupt end.

Johnson told reporters he was encouraged when an amendment failed earlier this week, that would have gutted many farm programs.

"This will make good progress, and I'm hopeful that before the week is out that the Farm Bill will have been passed. I am assuming that the (long pause) I'm assuming it will pass."

There were several times Johnson's press secretary added additional information for reporters. But that's not uncommon in conference calls.

Sen. Tim Johnson
A photo released by Sen. Tim Johnson's office shows him with his wife, Barb.
Photo courtesy of Sen. Johnson's office

Johnson says he'll mark the one-year anniversary of his stroke with a private meeting with the doctors, nurses and therapists who treated him and then a lunch with his staff.

Johnson has already said he will run for re-election in 2008. He says he's able to campaign and says he will debate his opponent.

"Common sense dictates that I approach this carefully in the early phases in the campaign, but I am ready to go."

Johnson will visit several South Dakota communities during the congressional holiday recess including his home town of Vermillion, Mitchell, and Aberdeen.