Dems hold on Senate not so sure anymore!

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Dem senator critical after emergency brain surgery



THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson was in critical condition recovering from emergency brain surgery Thursday, creating political drama over whether his illness could cost Democrats newly won control of the Senate.
The South Dakota senator, 59, suffered from bleeding in the brain caused by a congenital malformation, the U.S. Capitol physician said. He described the surgery as successful.

The condition, usually present at birth, causes tangled blood vessels that can burst.

Democrats hold a fragile 51-49 margin in the new Senate that convenes Jan. 4. If Johnson leaves the Senate, the Republican governor of South Dakota could appoint a Republican to fill the remaining two years of Johnson’s term — keeping the Senate in GOP hands with Vice President Dick Cheney’s tie-breaking power.

Incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he had visited Johnson in the hospital Thursday morning and that he was confident of a full recovery.

Asked about whether Democratic control of the Senate might be jeopardized, Reid said, “There isn’t a thing that’s changed.” Reid refused to comment on Johnson’s medical condition, declining to even answer a question on whether the senator was conscious.

“To me he looked very good,” Reid said.

Johnson was taken to the hospital on Wednesday after becoming disoriented during a conference phone call with reporters. At first, he answered questions normally but then began to stutter. He paused, then continued stammering before appearing to recover and ending the call.

“The senator is recovering without complication,” said Adm. John Eisold, the Capitol physician. “It is premature to determine whether further surgery will be required or to assess any long-term prognosis.” Eisold said doctors drained the blood that had accumulated in Johnson’s brain and stopped continued bleeding.

Johnson’s condition, also known as AVM, or arteriovenous malformation, causes arteries and veins to grow abnormally large and become tangled.

The condition is believed to affect about 300,000 Americans, according to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. The institute’s Web site said only about 12 percent of the people with the condition experience symptoms, ranging in severity. It kills about 3,000 people a year.

The senator’s wife, Barbara Johnson, said the family “is encouraged and optimistic.” In a statement from Johnson’s office Thursday, she said her family was “grateful for the prayers and good wishes of friends, supporters and South Dakotans.” A person familiar with Johnson’s situation said surgery began late Wednesday night and ended around 12:30 a.m. Thursday and that the next 24 to 48 hours would be critical in determining Johnson’s condition. The person spoke on condition of anonymity out of respect for the senator’s family.

If Johnson were forced to relinquish his seat, a replacement would be named by South Dakota’s GOP Gov. Mike Rounds.

A Republican appointee would create a 50-50 tie, and allow the GOP to retain Senate control.

However, Senate historian Don Ritchie said senators serve out their terms unless they resign or die. Nine senators have remained in the Senate even though illnesses kept them away from the chamber for six months or more.

Rounds’ press secretary, Mark Johnston, said Thursday the governor had nothing new to say. “We’re watching as much as everyone else,” he said.

The governor, elected to a second four-year term last month, has been widely seen as the Republican candidate with the best chance to challenge Johnson in two years.

Other than Rounds himself, top possibilities if a replacement senator were needed include Lt. Gov. Dennis Daugaard and state Public Utilities Commission Chairman Dusty Johnson, considered a rising star in the Republican Party. Retiring GOP legislative leaders, such as state House Speaker Matthew Michels and Senate Majority Leader Eric Bogue, also might be considered.

Johnson, who turns 60 later this month, was admitted to George Washington University hospital at midday after experiencing what his office initially said was a possible stroke.

His spokeswoman, Julianne Fisher, later told reporters that it had been determined that the senator had suffered neither a stroke nor a heart attack.

Fisher said that after making the conference call with reporters from the recording studio in the basement of the Capitol, he then walked back to his office but appeared to not be feeling well. The Capitol physician came to his office and examined him, and it was decided he should go to the hospital.

He was taken to the hospital by ambulance around noon, Fisher said. “It was caught very early,” she said.

Johnson is up for re-election in 2008.

In 1969, another South Dakota senator, Karl Mundt, a Republican, suffered a stroke while in office. Mundt continued to serve until the end of his term in January 1973, although he was unable to attend Senate sessions and was stripped of his committee assignments by the Senate Republican Conference in 1972.

Johnson, who was elected in 1996, holds the same seat previously held by Mundt. South Dakota Secretary of State Chris Nelson said there were no special restrictions on an appointment by the governor and a replacement would not have to be from the same political party.

The Senate last convened with a perfect balance of 50 Republicans and 50 Democrats in January 2001. Then, the two parties struck a power-sharing agreement that gave control of the Senate to Republicans but gave Democrats equal representation on committees.

That arrangement lasted only until June 2001, when Vermont Republican James Jeffords became an independent who chose to vote with Democrats on organizational matters, giving Democrats control until Republicans won back the Senate in the 2002 midterm elections.

Johnson, a centrist Democrat, was first elected to the Senate in 1996 after serving 10 years in the House. He narrowly defeated Republican John Thune in his 2002 re-election bid. Thune defeated Sen. Tom Daschle, the former Senate Democratic leader, two years later.

Johnson underwent prostate cancer treatment in 2004, and subsequent tests have shown him to be clear of the disease.

Johnson is the second senator to become ill after the Nov. 7 election. Wyoming Sen. Craig Thomas, a Republican, was diagnosed with leukemia on Election Day. He is back at work.

Originally published on December 14, 2006

http://www.nydailynews.com/front/breaking_news/story/480086p-403944c.html
 
I think Johnson should leave the senate and deal with his health issues and let control stay where it is for now. Republicans are punks and will surely fuck up again and lose it too. Dems have the House ergo the purse strings. I'm sure they'd rather have that if they have to lose anything.

But as for Johnson, his health is more important than party shit. I hope he can recognize that.

-VG
 
nittie said:
Hopefully Bush is getting a well deserved break, maybe things will finally start going his way.
?????????????????????????????????????
Things have been going Bush's way (for better or mostly worse) since 9/11!
Since the Dems took both the House and the Senate NOW Bush wants to talk doing things in a bi-partisan way?!?
GTFOH!!! :angry:
 
VegasGuy said:
I think Johnson should leave the senate and deal with his health issues and let control stay where it is for now. Republicans are punks and will surely fuck up again and lose it too. Dems have the House ergo the purse strings. I'm sure they'd rather have that if they have to lose anything.

But as for Johnson, his health is more important than party shit. I hope he can recognize that.

-VG
But then Republicans take control of the Senate since Cheney would become the deciding vote on any partisan issues!
The Dems want the power of holding those Senate committee chairs!
 
Armageddon said:
But then Republicans take control of the Senate since Cheney would become the deciding vote on any partisan issues!
The Dems want the power of holding those Senate committee chairs!

So what? You'll survive it for a couple years more. Besides, you dont' want one party rule do you? I sure as hell don't want that. We had that 40 years with democrats and 12 years with republicans. When one runs shit, you got fucked up government.

But again, be patient. The republicans are bound to fuck up big before long. They always do.

-VG
 
Armageddon said:
?????????????????????????????????????
Things have been going Bush's way (for better or mostly worse) since 9/11!
Since the Dems took both the House and the Senate NOW Bush wants to talk doing things in a bi-partisan way?!?
GTFOH!!! :angry:


I don't think Bush envisioned whats happening in Iraq today. I believe he thought it would be a quick, clean operation. I also don't think he foresaw a civil war on the Arab peninsula but thats what he's looking at. When I say maybe things will start going his way I mean maybe Bush will get a break on the situation and accomplish the goals he laid out for Iraq.
 
nittie said:
I don't think Bush envisioned whats happening in Iraq today. I believe he thought it would be a quick, clean operation. I also don't think he foresaw a civil war on the Arab peninsula but thats what he's looking at. When I say maybe things will start going his way I mean maybe Bush will get a break on the situation and accomplish the goals he laid out for Iraq.
... and you do you honestly think that whats going on in Iraq now was not reasonably foreseeable, before the invasion ??? I don't know about hardheaded ass GW, but this country needs a break right now -- before more shit spins out of control, including, but not limited to, Lebanon, Israel/Palestine, Iran ....

QueEx
 
Yeah we need a break because if we don't get one soon our military will collapse and our economy soon after, I'm not making this up a general reported yesterday that we are stretched to the limit. And the strong stock market isn't strong because the U.S. is funding the military-industrial complex it's because the world is shifting resources to different markets or predicting an implosion in America. If Bush doesn't get a break we are fucked.
 
<font size="5"><center>Senator's Doctor Expects Him to Return</font size></center>

MARY CLARE JALONICK | June 11, 2007 01:15 PM EST
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The doctor overseeing Sen. Tim Johnson's recovery from a brain hemorrhage said he expects the ailing Democrat to resume his duties in the Senate.

Dr. Michael Yochelson said in a statement issued through Johnson's office that the South Dakota Democrat showed improvement last week in walking unassisted and in his speech, which has become more fluid.

"I am very well aware that he is interested in continuing his work as a senator and I am confident that he will be able to resume his duties," Yochelson said.

It is still unclear when that will be. A spokeswoman for Johnson would not give a date for his return.

"We're letting the doctors set the timelines and they are saying therapy first," said Julianne Fisher. "We are at the six-month mark and the doctors are very pleased with his progress. As he continues to heal, it is clear that he is cognitively doing well and is on a path to get back here."

Johnson, 60, underwent emergency surgery on Dec. 13 for arteriovenous malformation, a condition that causes arteries and veins in the brain to grow abnormally large, become tangled and sometimes burst.

He was stricken a month after elections that gave the Democrats a one-seat majority in the Senate, and his ailment raised the possibility that, were he to be incapacitated, South Dakota's Republican governor would appoint a Republican successor and return the Senate to GOP control.

Last week, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he expected Johnson to return to the Senate in September, if not earlier. Reid, D-Nev., said Johnson has recovered 90 percent of his speech, although his right side remains weak.

"He and his family and the doctors are trying to decide whether he will come back in September or July, but he's really doing quite well," Reid said.

Yochelson, director of Brain Injury Programs at Washington's National Rehabilitation Hospital and Johnson's attending physician, said the senator's memory and processing skills are strong.

"With his improving language skills, the senator is able to express himself more clearly, which allows us to recognize the fact that he is doing well cognitively. He is reading the paper daily and talking with friends, family and colleagues."

Johnson is up for re-election next year, but has not said whether he will run. His office said the senator continues to receive therapy and does Senate work from home.

___

Associated Press Writer Wayne Ortman contributed to this report from Sioux Falls, S.D.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20070611/ailing-senator/
 
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