Republican Kay Granger of Texas living at senior living facility, which she had not disclosed to public
Summary
Texas Republican Congresswoman Kay Granger, 81, has not voted in the US House since July while reportedly dealing with dementia and living in a senior facility.
Her absence, undisclosed until media investigation, raises concerns about representation in her district and her capacity to serve.
Granger, a long-time legislator and former House Appropriations chair, announced plans to retire in 2025.
Critics argue her condition may have impacted her 2022 re-election. Local Republicans called her absence troubling amid critical votes, prompting broader debates on aging lawmakers’ transparency and governance.
I agree she has no business having her seat, but if you implement some trigger for an immediate special election for this and similar things like it, either something else will be missed, or it will has a risk of a back door for abuse
I'd rather have mandatory cognitive tests. Start them at fifty, since some people develop early-onset dementia. Fail a cognitive test, you're out, regardless of age.
Nah. That's very arbitrary. An age is a definitive and objective number, "mental capacity" is so vague, and should not ever be a thing in political offices (that's up to voters to decide if they are "mentally capable" of doing the job). Using arbitray test like "mental capacity" are like those "literacy tests", its make the test administrators the de facto decision maket of who gets to be in office. Not a good precedent to set.
Rules should be clear and easy to implement & enforce. Example: 65 years old mandatory retirement. Simple, straightforward.
At the very least, reporting debilitating medical conditions needs to be a legal requirement for holding office. It's a national security issue.
And that legal requirement shouldn't be applied to the congressmember, but to the office itself. There's no way the staff didn't know, so the entire office should carry an obligation to report, that way someone will do it.
Normal person with dementia: gets fired immediately as soon as employer find out
Congress people: ⬆️
(Edit: Btw, congressmembers have much better retirement fund than a normal person, so there's really no reason for a congressmember to continue "working", other than to stay in power.)
If I didn't show up to work for 6 months, they'd stop paying me - surely there would be a case to force her to return the salary she drew while not actually performing any of her duties?
The amount of elder-abuse that is happening just so their families can keep sucking down taxpayer money is fucking sickening.
To be clear, that's not the main reason it happens. The main reason it actually happens is that it's really fucking easy to convince someone with fucking dementia that they need to vote a certain way, because they won't even know what they're fucking voting on anyway.
But whether politics or family, the entire enterprise is fucking harrowingly foul.
Tbh I think she owes We The People some of that congressional salary back. And a major apology. The right thing to do would have been to stand the fuck down. Dementia or not, she was unable to do her job.
if elder- and health- care was treated as a normal part of life and funded socially instead of a premium lifestyle there would be less incentive for her family to abuse her like this :(