Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

McCain returns to Arizona with health issues

He will miss tax vote

- By Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — Republican Sen. John McCain has returned home to Arizona after being hospitaliz­ed for a viral infection while battling brain cancer and will miss a crucial Senate vote on the GOP tax package, his office said Sunday.

The 81-year-old senator will undergo physical therapy and rehabilita­tion at the Mayo Clinic in the state after spending several days at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Maryland. In a brief statement, the office provided an assessment from Mark Gilbert, chief of neuro-oncology at

the National Institutes of Health’s National Cancer Institute.

“Senator McCain has responded well to treatment he received at Walter Reed Medical Center for a viral infection and continues to improve,” Dr. Gilbert said. “An evaluation of his underlying cancer shows he is responding positively to ongoing treatment.”

Mr.McCain expressed appreciati­on for his care and the outpouring of support and, according to his office, “looks forward to returning toWashingt­on in January.”

Now in his sixth Senate term, Mr. McCain underwent surgery in mid-July to remove a 2-inch blood clot in his brain after being diagnosedw­ith glioblasto­ma.

His daughter Meghan McCain tweeted Sunday: “My father is doing well and we are all looking forward to spending Christmas together in Arizona.”

Earlier in the day, President Donald Trump told reporters he had spoken to Mr. McCain’s wife, Cindy.

“They’ve headed back, but I understand he’ll come if we ever needed his vote, whichhopef­ully we won’t,” Mr. Trump said after returning to the White House from Camp David. “But the word is that John will come back if we need his vote. And it’s too bad. He’s going through a very tough time, there’s no question about it. But he will come back if we need his vote.”

Republican­s hold a slim 52-48 majority in the Senate, and Mr. McCain and Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., missed votes last week. The 80-year-old Mr. Cochran had a non-melanoma lesion removed from his nose earlier this week. He is expectedto vote on the tax bill.

Republican­s secured the support of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker last Friday for the tax measure, and they are poised to pass the bill by a narrow margin in the face of unified Democratic opposition. As a backstop, Vice President Mike Pence would be available to break a tie.

A vote is expected in the House on Tuesday and the Senate on Wednesday. If approved, the measure would head to Mr. Trump for his signature on what will be his first major legislativ­e accomplish­ment since takingoffi­ce 11 months ago.

After his summer surgery, Mr. McCain rebounded quickly, returning to Washington on July 25 to a standing ovation from his colleagues.

In a dramatic turn, he cast a deciding vote against the Republican health care bill, upsetting the sevenyear effort by the GOP to dismantle much of thenPresid­ent Barack Obama’s health care law.

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