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McConnell's office has stonewalled the public for weeks, offering nothing but vague statements while EMS dispatch audio suggests cardiac arrest was called in at his D.C. home. Senate colleagues claim phone calls happened, but only a tight circle of three people say they've spoken to him — and that's not nearly enough transparency for a sitting U.S. senator. The American public deserves real answers, not recycled press releases.
Public office does not erase an individual's right to medical privacy. A senator's duty is to perform his responsibilities, not disclose every private health detail. A Senate ally spoke with McConnell for nearly 20 minutes about Iran, Ukraine, Senate history, and other issues, proving he is capable of holding substantive conversations. The focus should be on whether he can perform his duties, not demands for private medical details or emergency records.