The 81-year-old senator’s health problems have raised questions about the Republican’s ability to stay in office. Capitol Hill doctor assures that Mitch McConnell does not reveal brain injuries.
Brian P. Monahan, a doctor at the Capitol, assures that Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in the Senate, can continue to perform his duties and that there is no evidence that he suffered a stroke or any other injury of that nature. At a time when doubts are mounting about the 81-year-old senator’s health, the Republican office circulated a doctor’s letter assuring McConnell is fit to continue in office.
Last week, Mitch McConnell was blocked while answering journalists’ questions at a press conference in Kentucky. It was the second episode in less than a month that raised well-founded doubts about the state of health of the Republican leader in the Senate and about his conditions to continue in office.
Now, in a letter published by The New York Times, attending physician Brian P. Monahan confirms that after running the senator through intensive tests including an MRI and neurological evaluation, he found no evidence of seizure disorders, strokes or disorders. like Parkinson’s.
Likewise, Monahan recommends that McConnell continue the treatment that he has carried out in the follow-up to the curfew that expires in March 2023. Otherwise, the curfew, at a hotel in Washington, has been presented by the Senator’s team as one of the causes for his problems. Of health.
On August 30, the Republican leader in the Senate, first elected in 1984, froze at a press conference, unable to answer questions from reporters. The same thing had happened in late July, when McConnell was blocked from answering questions, this time on Capitol Hill.
According to The New York Times, following Monahan’s medical evaluation, the senator returned to work. On Tuesday, McConnell returned to his office on Capitol Hill, at which time the Senate resumed work after the holidays.
McConnell’s health problems have intensified the debate about the age of US senators and politicians in general. The Guardian recalls, in this regard, that opinion polls in the United States show a majority in favor of creating an age limit for political office: we are one year away from an election that should again face Joe Biden and Donald Trump , elderly. 80 and 77, respectively.
Source: Observadora