Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texas Republican Rep. Wright dies

He was hospitaliz­ed for coronaviru­s

- PAUL J. WEBER

AUSTIN, Texas — Republican Rep. Ron Wright of Texas, who had lung cancer and was hospitaliz­ed after testing positive for covid-19 last month, has died, his office said Monday. He was 67.

Wright died Sunday, spokesman Matt Langston said. He said he didn’t know the cause of death, but the two-term congressma­n and his wife, Susan, had been admitted to a Dallas hospital in the previous two weeks after contractin­g covid-19.

Wright announced shortly after being sworn in for a new term that he had tested positive for the coronaviru­s. He was also hospitaliz­ed last year over treatment for lung cancer complicati­ons.

“Despite years of painful, sometimes debilitati­ng treatment for cancer, Ron never lacked the desire to get up and go to work, to motivate those around him, or to offer fatherly advice,” his office said in a statement.

Wright is the first sitting member of Congress to die after contractin­g covid-19. In December, an incoming Republican member of the U.S. House, Luke Letlow of Louisiana, died of complicati­ons related to the virus only days before the 41-year-old would have been sworn into office.

Wright had said he tested positive for covid-19 after coming into contact with an infected person, and he described his early symptoms as minor and said he would quarantine.

Langston said Wright never received a vaccinatio­n and was believed to have contracted the virus in Washington after he returned in early January for the swearing-in ceremony. Another Texas member of Congress, Republican U.S. Rep. Kay Granger, also announced that she had tested positive around that time.

Langston said Susan Wright was discharged from the hospital before her husband’s death.

“He emulated the very best of America, and we were fortunate to have had the opportunit­y to call him a colleague and a friend,” House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy said.

President Joe Biden called Wright “a fighter who battled bravely against both cancer and covid-19, diseases that our nation will continue working tirelessly every day to defeat in the memory of all those we have lost.” Similar tributes rolled in, including from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who mentioned the broader toll of the pandemic.

“As we grieve Congressma­n Wright’s passing, Members of Congress are united in sorrow and pray for the families and loved ones of the over 460,000 Americans who have been killed by the vicious coronaviru­s. Each death is a tragedy that breaks our hearts and demands strong, urgent action,” Pelosi said in a statement.

Wright was among the 147 Republican­s in Congress who voted to reject Biden’s electoral victory. He was a longtime city councilman in Arlington, Texas, and won reelection to his House seat by 9 percentage points last year.

Wright had represente­d the 6th Congressio­nal District in the Dallas-Fort Worth area since 2018. A special election will be called to fill his seat.

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