
There’s been another chilling update on Kentucky GOP Sen. Mitch McConnell.
Several top Republicans were asked about McConnell’s condition on Tuesday, and their responses were not reassuring.
Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee has said that even members of Congress are in the dark about McConnell’s current condition.
Speculation has surrounded the health of the 84-year-old McConnell since the Kentucky senator was found unconscious and required CPR at his home in Washington, D.C., weeks ago.
McConnell’s staff has provided no significant update on his condition since he was hospitalized June 14.
The secrecy has fueled speculation that there is an effort to keep the full extent of the Republican’s condition from the public and has raised questions about whether he will be able to return to office.
On Monday night, MAGA social media user Mila Joy wondered why other senators haven’t spoken out about McConnell’s condition.
“Because they are ALL in on it together. That’s why,” Joy posted to her 571,000 X followers.
In reply, Sen. Lee posted: “Many of us aren’t speaking about Mitch McConnell’s condition because we know nothing about his condition.”
But Lee’s assessment contradicts earlier comments from Senate Majority Leader John Thune after McConnell was first hospitalized.
Thune said he had spoken to the 84-year-old and that he “sounded good.”
“He wants to be back, but I’ll defer to his staff on when,” Thune said on June 15.
Popular conservative activist Laura Loomer claimed recently that sources told her that McConnell is in a “vegetative state,” dismissing Thune’s version of events.
“I was in South Dakota all week, and a Thune staffer told a source close to me and the White House that Mitch McConnell is in extreme organ failure,” Loomer posted.
Things with McConnell have gotten worse by the day.

Emergency dispatch audio indicating that an individual at McConnell’s Washington, D.C., residence suffered a reported “cardiac arrest” earlier this month has renewed questions about the former Senate Republican leader’s health and whether he will return to the Senate.
Since the reported incident, McConnell’s office has provided scant details on the former Senate GOP leader’s health condition, except to say that he allegedly “appreciates the outpouring of support he’s receiving while he continues his recovery in the hospital.”
His office last week also said the 84-year-old senator “continues to improve, and is working closely with his staff on Kentucky and Senate matters while the Senate is out of session.”
The limited information released about what led to McConnell’s hospitalization on June 14, coupled with emergency dispatch audio referencing a reported cardiac arrest, has prompted renewed speculation about the severity of the senator’s condition.
Al Cross, a veteran Kentucky political journalist who has interviewed McConnell extensively in recent weeks, said the senator’s office has disclosed few details about the medical emergency, a lack of information that has fueled rumors and heightened public speculation about his health.
In recent months, he has frequently been seen using a wheelchair while traveling through the Senate’s hallways.
When walking into the Senate chamber, he is often accompanied by aides or members of his security detail who assist him as he moves through the building, the outlet noted.
McConnell’s office announced on June 14 that the Kentucky Republican had been hospitalized that morning and was “receiving excellent care,” but it did not disclose the reason for his admission or provide details about the seriousness of his condition.
Conservative activist Laura Loomer cited a “high level source close to the White House” in a Monday post on X, writing that that McConnell’s health condition is much worse than anyone knows and is “not coming back” to the Senate.
McConnell, however, has not cast a vote in the Senate since June 11.
This article may contain commentary which reflects the author’s opinion.
