Audio from a dispatch referring to a health issue at Mitch McConnell’s home has fueled questions over whether he will return to his duties

Emergency dispatch audio referring to a “cardiac arrest” at US Senator Mitch McConnell’s Washington home has raised new questions about the political future of the former Republican leader, according to media reports.

McConnell, 84, is a Republican senator from Kentucky who has served in the Senate since 1985. He was the longest-serving Senate party leader in US history, stepping down from the post in February 2024 following a series of public health episodes.

The recordings, first reported by CBS and cited by several US outlets earlier this week, captured a dispatcher telling emergency responders that a person at McConnell’s home was in “cardiac arrest.” The identity of the patient has not been officially confirmed, and McConnell’s office has not commented on the recordings or the reported emergency.

Instead, aides have maintained that the senator is “continuing his recovery” in a hospital. In its latest statement on Thursday, McConnell’s office said: “The Senator continues to improve, and is working closely with his staff on Kentucky and Senate matters while the Senate is out of session.” 




McConnell was admitted to a hospital on June 14 after his office said he was “receiving excellent care.” It has since announced that he would miss Senate votes during his recovery but has not disclosed the reason for his hospitalization or indicated when he may return to Washington.

Conservative activist Laura Loomer, however, claimed on X on Monday that, according to “a high-level source close to the White House,” McConnell’s health is “much worse than expected” and that he is “not coming back” to the Senate.




The uncertainty comes just months before the November midterm elections that will determine whether Republicans are able to defend their congressional majority.

McConnell’s absence has also raised questions about whether Republicans could lose a crucial vote as they seek to pass an emergency defense spending bill and a third budget reconciliation package before the end of 2026. With the GOP holding a narrow Senate majority, McConnell’s vote could prove crucial, as several Republican senators have previously broken with US President Donald Trump on major legislation.

Although he publicly endorsed Trump’s reelection bid, reports have suggested the longtime senator was sharply critical of the president in private, allegedly calling him a “despicable human being” who is unfit for office, according to a biography by journalist Michael Tackett.

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