Independent journalist Desirée Townsend is raising questions about the continued hospitalization of Sen. Mitch McConnell following what she described as a serious medical emergency on June 14, arguing that the situation exposes broader concerns about congressional procedures, national security, and the lack of a constitutional mechanism for addressing incapacitated members of Congress.
In a video recorded outside George Washington University Hospital, Townsend said McConnell had remained hospitalized for three weeks following the incident.
“Desiree Townsend here again outside of George Washington University Hospital, as we mark week three of the hospitalization of Senator Mitch McConnell, following the june 14 medical emergency,” Townsend said.
She pointed to Capitol Hill Police vehicles outside the hospital as an indication that she believed the senator remained there.
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“As you can see behind me, the Capitol Hill police vehicles, these black vehicles, are still parked outside the hospital here, an indication that he is likely also still here,” she said.
Townsend said the story gained national attention after she released EMS dispatch audio that she said documented the senator's medical emergency.
“So, after I first released the dispatch audio indicating that he was found unconscious and was given CPR for cardiac arrest, this story finally gained national attention,” Townsend said.
She argued that the public has not fully considered the implications of the situation.
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“However, I don't think many Americans fully appreciate the seriousness of what may be at stake following Senator McConnell's medical emergency three weeks ago, or how Congress's lack of a constitutional mechanism to remove members for incapacity could have broader implications for the nation's governance, and most importantly, national security,” Townsend said.
Townsend also questioned an earlier public statement from Senate Majority Leader John Thune regarding McConnell's condition.
“This incredibly odd story also involves Senate Majority Leader John Thune, who stated to Politico that he had spoken with McConnell the day after his hospitalization, and that he quote sounded good, end quote,” Townsend said.
According to Townsend, that statement affected media coverage during the early days following McConnell's hospitalization.
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“Now, this statement threw off the press for nearly two weeks, placating the public until I released the EMS dispatch audio showing the seriousness of this medical emergency,” she said.
Townsend added that, to her knowledge, McConnell had not spoken publicly with other members of Congress since entering the hospital.
“Now, given that Senator McConnell is still here in the hospital three weeks later, and as far as I know, he has not spoken with any other members of Congress. Now puts this initial remark by Leader Thune into question,” Townsend said.
She acknowledged there could be another explanation for Thune's comments.
“And look, he could have just been attempting to give Senator McConnell his privacy, but the better response could have been, I have not heard anything, or I don't know,” she said.
Townsend then shifted her focus to former Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, McConnell's wife.
“And this story gets even odder after I reported a couple days ago of a press release documenting that McConnell's wife, Elaine Chao, met with the Vice President of China three days after his hospitalization,” Townsend said.
She emphasized that her concerns were not centered on the trip itself but on the timing and Chao's status as a private citizen.
“And to be clear, the issue is not merely that Elaine Chao went to China, the issue is she is a private citizen, she is, she, she holds no official government position. She's married to a sitting US senator who reportedly had a major medical emergency, and now she's meeting with one of China's highest-ranking officials three days later,” Townsend said.
She continued, “All while the American public and possibly senior US government officials in the Trump administration, as well as members of Congress, lacked clear information about his condition.”
Townsend said she believes such a meeting carries broader significance.
“So let me be clear about this. A meeting with China's Vice President is not casual, even if this was preplanned. It signals Beijing views her as someone politically meaningful, yet she has no current role in the US government,” she said.
Townsend then posed several questions regarding the meeting.
“So, why is she having these meaningful meetings with top government officials in China? Did she potentially carry messages to the CCP? Did she discuss US policy, or is she being treated as a back channel to nonpublic information, including her husband's health condition?” Townsend asked.
She also discussed McConnell's access to classified information as a sitting senator.
“Like every sitting member of Congress, Senator McConnell has access to highly classified closed-door intelligence briefings on matters impacting US national security,” Townsend said.
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She noted that such briefings can include military operations and defense appropriations, adding that those responsibilities are significant given McConnell's position on the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Townsend then questioned what safeguards exist if a member of Congress is unable to independently perform official duties.
“Now, if Senator McConnell potentially lacks the mental capacity and independent ability to perform his duty sitting as a US senator, could classified information have been accessed, discussed, or even recorded by individuals hypothetically operating his office behind the scenes?” Townsend asked.
She continued, “More broadly, what safeguards exist to protect classified information when a member of Congress is no longer capable of independently carrying out the office responsibilities?”
Townsend concluded by returning to Chao's reported meeting in China.
“Lastly, what information, if any, did Elaine Chao carry with her to meet with the Vice President of the People's Republic of China, Hank, on june 17, 2020-six three days after her husband, Mitch McConnell, reportedly went into cardiac arrest?” Townsend said.
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