Partly Cloudy
65°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

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

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 2)

Before falling ill, Kirk served on four committees — Appropriations, Banking, Health and Aging. Trover, his spokesman, declined to say which panels he wanted to sit on during the 113th Congress.

Kirk returns to key staff changes, as his former chief of staff, Lester Munson, recently left for another post on Capitol Hill, and his No. 2 aide, Kate Dickens, has assumed the top job.

Political scientist Ross Baker, an expert on Congress who teaches at Rutgers, said in an interview Wednesday that the Senate is a “sentimental place” whose members are sensitive to sick or disabled colleagues. One, coincidentally, is Biden, a former senator who had surgeries for life-threatening brain aneurysms in 1988 and was absent from Congress for months.

Baker noted that even senators who return to the chamber after an unsuccessful presidential run “have a hard time getting back in the stream.”

“Things have passed them by,” he said. “A good Senate staff, to some degree, can compensate for the absence of the principal himself or herself, but it’s not entirely perfect. There’s a kind of pulsing rhythm of the way the chamber operates, and it takes a little while to get back into that beat.”

Chicago area doctors who have watched Kirk’s progress with keen interest said his mental and physical endurance might be persistent issues, as they are for other stroke patients.

A key political advantage for Kirk is that he is not up for re-election until 2016. Campaign funds for him trickled in as he recuperated, according to Federal Election Commission reports that showed he had just over $393,000 in his war chest last Sept. 30.

The commission at some future date must render a decision on whether Kirk and his then-girlfriend, Dodie McCracken, broke campaign-finance law during his 2010 Senate bid. A one-time, live-in girlfriend, McCracken received more than $143,000 in fees and expenses for campaign work, but her name does not appear on federal reports because she was paid through a company working for the campaign.

The complaint, brought to the FEC’s attention by the lawmaker’s ex-wife, has been labeled “groundless” by a Kirk aide. It was first revealed by the Tribune in May.

Comments


Reader Poll

What is your stance on a proposed 1 percent sales tax to fund local school building projects?

I'm in favor of anything that will help improve school finances
I will support it if it helps to lower my property taxes
I oppose it because I don't believe it will impact property taxes and I will just pay twice
I'm against any additional taxes
I have not heard enough yet to form an opinion