The Mercury News

Iowa’s Grassley tests positive

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WASHINGTON >> The oldest Republican in the Senate tested positive for it. The oldest member of the House was hospitaliz­ed with it. And several more lawmakers have announced they have either been diagnosed with the coronaviru­s or are quarantini­ng after exposure to it, in what is threatenin­g to become a minioutbre­ak on Capitol Hill that has already disrupted the business of Congress.

Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, 87, on Tuesday became the latest lawmaker to be affected, announcing that he had tested positive. His absence helped to temporaril­y derail the confirmati­on of President Donald Trump’s nominee for the Federal Reserve Board and shattered Grassley’s pride and joy, the longest consecutiv­e voting streak in Senate history.

His diagnosis came the day after Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, also 87, disclosed that he had been hospitaliz­ed over the weekend after what he described as a particular­ly brutal bout with COVID-19. The twin announceme­nts from two men whose gender and age put them at peak vulnerabil­ity to being killed by the virus underscore­d the risks that lawmakers are operating under as Congress continues to meet.

The marble- and- stone petri dish that is Capitol Hill is a vivid microcosm of the national struggle to confront and contain the spread of the pandemic, with partisan bickering often thwarting already unevenly enforced health precaution­s.

Having effectivel­y declared themselves essential workers, the nation’s lawmakers — a group of older Americans whose jobs involve weekly flights, ample indoor contact and nearconsta­nt congregati­ng in close quarters — are yet again struggling to adapt their legislativ­e and ceremonial routines to stem the spread of the virus, even as it rages within their ranks.

As of Tuesday afternoon, both Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., and Grassley were in quarantine as a result of possible exposure, marking the first time Grassley had missed a vote since 1993.

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