Republican Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, a member of leadership, told reporters that he’s pressed leaders and the Capitol physician’s office in the last several hours about how to mitigate risk of members getting off “about a thousand different airplanes” every week.
“We have the space for it,” Blunt said. “I think we could find a place to do it. I think we could do it in a way that every member of the Senate, staff got a test every couple weeks or a month and everyone traveling got one every time they traveled.”
Asked if there was a different dynamic than in May when leaders declined the offer of additional testing on the Hill, Blunt said, “You mean the Louie Gohmert dynamic?”
“Everyone who is traveling who works for the Congress, gets one every time they travel and everyone else who works for the Congress gets one as often as the Capitol physician or their employer thinks [they] should get one,” he said.
A growing chorus of lawmakers say that Gohmert’s diagnosis could be a sign that it is time for lawmakers to have greater access to tests especially with both the House and Senate back in session.
The chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, said, “We should be tested when we go home so we are not carriers coming back and forth. I have said for weeks that I think it is a good idea for us to be tested.”
“I got it up here on Capitol Hill when we were doing the CARES Act, and I’m mindful that we should be buckling down and trying to get a bill done, but that puts people at risk. Why not have good testing as we are here trying to find a path forward for the country? I do think this is frontline stuff for the next few weeks. Testing should be available for people,” Kaine said.
Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska also argued that more testing should be available on Capitol Hill. “Yes! Test! There should be more testing all over the country. How about that? Really, I am a big fan of testing. I don’t like it, but I’m a big fan of it,” she said.
Still, some members worry about the public perception of Congress having access to rapid testing when lag times across the country for results are days or weeks. Sen. Kevin Cramer, a Republican from North Dakota, said he didn’t think Congress was “all that special.”
“You know, I don’t think that Capitol Hill is all that special in that sense necessarily,” Cramer said. “But I think if people feel they need to be tested a lot, they should be able have that available to them. I don’t feel that need to be tested all the time. I don’t know that a Congressman or a Senator is any more important than anyone else with regard to testing. If one more person that’s got symptoms need testing, I’d hate for me to take that test when I’m feeling perfectly fine.”