Los Angeles Times

McConnell returns to Senate after fall, concussion

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WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell was back at work in the U.S. Capitol on Monday, almost six weeks after a fall at a Washington-area hotel and extended treatment for a concussion.

The longtime Kentucky senator, 81, has been recovering at home since he was released from a rehabilita­tion facility March 25. He fell after attending an event earlier that month, injuring his head and fracturing a rib.

He visited his office Friday, the first time since his injury, and is expected to be working a full schedule in the Senate this week.

“I am looking forward to returning to the Senate on Monday,” McConnell tweeted Thursday. “We’ve got important business to tackle and big fights to win for Kentuckian­s and the American people.”

McConnell returns to the Senate ahead of a busy stretch in which Congress will have to find a way to raise the nation’s debt ceiling and negotiate additional aid for the Ukraine war, among other policy matters. And he comes back as several other senators have been out for medical reasons, raising questions about how much the Senate will be able to achieve in the coming months with a 51-49 split between the parties.

Already, the GOP leader’s absence, along with those of Democratic Sens. Dianne Feinstein and John Fetterman, among others, have contribute­d to the Senate’s lethargic pace in the first few months of the year.

Unlike the last two years, during which Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) was able to push through key elements of President Biden’s agenda with the help of a Democratic-led House, the Senate has been significan­tly slowed with Republican­s now in charge in the House. And absences have made even simple votes such as those on nomination­s more difficult.

One immediate question for McConnell upon his return is whether to help Democrats temporaril­y replace Feinstein on the Senate Judiciary Committee as she continues to recover in California from a case of shingles. Democrats have become increasing­ly frustrated as the Democrat’s more than six-week absence on the panel has stalled confirmati­on of some of President Biden’s nominees, and Feinstein has asked for a short-term substitute on the committee.

Democrats can’t do that, though, without help from Republican­s, since approval of the process would take 60 votes on the Senate floor. Republican­s have so far been quiet about whether they will object.

It is unclear when Feinstein, 89, will return to Washington.

Also returning to the Senate on Monday was Fetterman, who was hospitaliz­ed for clinical depression in February. He was treated for six weeks at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, and his doctors say his depression is now “in remission.”

Fetterman’s announceme­nt that he was checking himself into the hospital earlier this year came after he suffered a stroke last year and has struggled with auditory processing disorder, which can render someone unable to speak fluidly and quickly process spoken conversati­on into meaning. The Pennsylvan­ia Democrat, 53, now uses devices in conversati­ons, meetings and congressio­nal hearings that transcribe spoken words in real time.

In a statement when he was released from Walter Reed late last month, Fetterman said the care he received there “changed my life.”

“I’m excited to be the father and husband I want to be, and the senator Pennsylvan­ia deserves,” said Fetterman, who won praise for his decision to seek treatment.

When McConnell visited his Capitol office Friday, video captured by NBC News showed him walking into the building without assistance as aides kept close by.

This was the second major injury for him in recent years. Four years ago he tripped and fell at his home in Kentucky, causing a shoulder fracture that required surgery. The Senate had just started a summer recess, and he worked from home as he recovered.

McConnell had polio in his early childhood, and he has long acknowledg­ed some difficulty as an adult in climbing stairs.

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