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A year after his stroke, Sen. Mark Kirk to march up Capitol steps to return to work

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Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, will walk the steps with Kirk, and the two will meet privately later in the day, Durbin spokeswoman Christina Mulka said.

Thursday is swearing-in day for the new class of more than 30 senators. Kirk took the oath of office in November 2010, with Biden presiding, and does not need to be sworn in again.

Kirk’s return to the Capitol comes two months after his celebrated 37-story climb to reach the top of the Willis Tower in Chicago on Nov. 4. He declined a Chicago Tribune request Wednesday for an interview previewing his Washington homecoming.

After his stroke, Kirk underwent three brain surgeries at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Shimkus said he met Kirk on March 11 after he had transferred to the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.

He said Kirk was in bed, having just completed physical therapy, with so little hair that some of his surgical scars were visible. Kirk used his right hand to give him a firm handshake and it was evident that the stroke had affected his left side, Shimkus said.

Shimkus said Kirk has “his full cognitive ability, but he’s going to be a much slower-paced Mark Kirk. Not the guy running down the hallways, not like ‘Chatty Kathy’ anymore. He’s going to be listening, and very deliberative.”

Still, the lawmaker asserted, “I think you’ll see Mark as involved, if not more involved, than any sitting U.S. senator.”

The visit was the last time Shimkus saw Kirk. He later relied on the accounts of others, including fellow Illinois House Republicans Judy Biggert and Aaron Schock, after they met with a convalescing Kirk.

Another House Republican from Illinois, Peter Roskam, issued a statement Wednesday calling Kirk a “hero” and adding, “Watching him take those Senate stairs will start 2013 off right.”

Kirk is returning to a Senate with fewer Republicans — his party will control 45 seats, down from 47. He just missed the highly charged vote on the so-called fiscal cliff, but will soon have to weigh in on the contentious issues including whether to raise the nation’s debt ceiling.

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