It’s getting to the point where Congress should consider adding a defibrillator to the podium right next to the microphone. U.S. Rep. John Larson (D-CT), age 76, had what’s being described as a “medical episode” after launching into an impassioned tirade against—you guessed it—Republicans and Elon Musk. Because when in doubt, blame the billionaire class, right?
Larson was mid-rant, accusing President Trump and the GOP of some grand conspiracy involving Social Security data, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), and Elon Musk. Apparently, Musk has gone from revolutionizing electric cars and launching rockets to secretly running government departments. Makes total sense if you’ve had one too many sips of the D.C. Kool-Aid.
Larson passionately declared that President Trump and Republicans are conspiring with billionaires to dismantle democracy, or puppies, or whatever today’s outrage du jour is. Then—dramatic pause—he literally paused. Like, froze mid-sentence. After an awkward silence that felt like it lasted longer than a Joe Biden State of the Union speech, Larson mumbled something barely audible—“and challenge us”—before fading out again. His time ran out, both literally and figuratively, and he yielded the floor.
76-year-old Democrat Rep. John Larson freezes mid-speech on the House floor.
WE NEED TERM LIMITS! pic.twitter.com/dSrqqAoAZH
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) February 11, 2025
His office was quick to jump in with damage control, claiming it was an “adverse reaction to new medication.” Because nothing says “I’m totally fine” like freezing mid-sentence on the House floor. They assured us he was “alert and engaged” later in the day. That’s politician-speak for “we propped him up with coffee and hoped no one noticed.”
Now, before Democrats get too defensive, let’s acknowledge that this isn’t exactly an isolated incident. Remember Mitch McConnell’s “pause button” moments last year? Twice in public, mid-sentence, and boom—frozen like a Zoom call with bad Wi-Fi. It’s almost as if we’ve got a geriatric edition of Survivor going on in Congress, except instead of tribal councils, we’ve got press conferences where people suddenly forget how to function.
Look, I get it—age catches up with everyone. But maybe, just maybe, it’s time we start questioning why we’ve got people well into their 70s and 80s holding the reins of government. There are retirement homes with more rigorous health checks than Congress, apparently.
At the end of the day, Larson’s episode is a reminder that the people making decisions about our future can barely finish a speech without a medical timeout. But sure, let’s keep pretending they’re the sharpest minds to lead us into the 21st century.