Sen. Johnson tells PBS teleprompter loaded wrong speech
Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson claimed that the speech he gave onstage Monday at the convention was the wrong one -- and that it was because the teleprompter had an old speech.
During his speech, Johnson had said that the Democrats' policies "are a clear and present danger to America, to our institutions, our values and our people."
When asked by PBS NewsHour about those remarks -- as Trump calls for national unity in the wake of his assassination attempt -- Johnson said he was talking about Democrats' policies and said, "I'll also give you an inside scoop -- that speech was written last week; they literally loaded the wrong speech."
"I had taken that out, OK. Instead, I loaded -- about that we needed a somber moment in history. We should heed President Trump's call, to unite, to be strong, to be determined. We must heal and unify this nation," he said. "I didn't know how to get that in without screwing up the teleprompter. I was not happy with that."
Johnson said he stands by saying that the Democrats' policies are "destroying this country."
"But we also have to try and unify and heal this nation," he said. "I didn’t attack any individual, I was talking about their policies."
A spokesperson for Johnson told ABC News that the wrong speech was loaded, and it was an old copy.
The speech was supposed to start with Johnson saying: "We meet at a somber moment in history. We should all heed President Trump's call for unity, strength and determination."
-ABC News' Jacob Steinberg, Oren Oppenheim and Brittany Shepherd