KY Sen. Mitch McConnell’s hospitalization: Catch up on the latest

Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell was hospitalized June 14, and his office confirmed late last week that the longtime lawmaker was still there.

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Besides confirming his hospitalization, officials have released few details about the 84-year-old’s condition. New reports about the circumstances of his hospitalization have prompted his Democratic challenger to demand transparency.

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Here’s what we know so far:

  • McConnell was hospitalized the morning of June 14 and was receiving “excellent care,” his spokesperson Stephanie Penn said in a brief statement that did not disclose why or where the 84-year-old senator was admitted.
  • Rep. Andy Barr, who is the running against Democratic nominee Charles Booker in the race the replace McConnell, told reporters June 20 that he’d exchanged text messages with McConnell, and said he was released from the hospital. McConnell’s office did not confirm at the time whether McConnell was still hospitalized.
  • The senator did not vote in the Senate the week of June 22 but was working “closely” with staff on Senate business and Kentucky matters as his health continued to recover, Penn said.
  • Two weeks after the hospitalization, McConnell’s office had still not confirmed whether he remained hospitalized, and the Senate was not in session, set to reconvene July 13.
  • EMS radio traffic reported by Punchbowl News revealed McConnell was “unconscious” at his Washington, D.C., home before being taken to the hospital, with a dispatcher directing an Advanced Life Support ambulance to his address at 8:36 a.m. June 14.
  • The June hospitalization is the latest in a string of health incidents dating back to 2023, including two public freezes in 2023, a concussion from falling down steps, and three public falls in 2025.
  • Democratic Senate candidate Charles Booker called for transparency, saying Kentuckians deserve to know “if our senator is alert, conscious, or capable of serving” and citing dispatch audio indicating first responders performed CPR for cardiac arrest at McConnell’s address.
  • A McConnell spokesperson said July 2 that the senator “continues to improve, and is working closely with his staff on Kentucky and Senate matters” while the Senate is out of session — the first update in more than a week.
  • McConnell has held his Senate seat since 1985 and is not seeking reelection this year, with Republican U.S. Rep. Andy Barr and Booker vying to replace him in the November election.

The summary points above are based on the reporting of Herald-Leader journalists. The roundup was produced with the assistance of AI. Herald-Leader reporters and an editor reviewed this story for accuracy. You can read more about our AI policy here.

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