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Veteran Democrat David Scott, aged 80, passed away unexpectedly on Tuesday night amid growing worries about his age-related health issues.
Having represented Georgia for 23 years, Scott was a prominent figure and previously held the position of lead Democrat on the House Agriculture Committee before Angie Craig succeeded him.
Throughout his career, Scott faced numerous primary opponents who raised concerns about his age and advocated for fresh leadership within the Democratic Party.
Scott’s passing marks the second instance of a sitting congressional member’s death this year, following Republican Doug LaMalfa from California, who died at 65 during surgery in January.
His final legislative action occurred on Monday afternoon when he voted in favor of the Improving Care in Rural America Reauthorization Act shortly before 4 p.m.
The news of Scott’s death spread through Capitol Hill while the Congressional Black Caucus was in session, leaving many of his colleagues in shock as they received the announcement.
Missouri Democrat Emanuel Cleaver, himself 81, opened the meeting with a prayer before Chair Yvette Clarke of New York addressed the caucus, per reports.
Scott’s death widens the narrow GOP majority in the House, as the Democrats are down two members since the start of the week.
Longtime Democrat David Scott, 80, suddenly died after mounting concerns over his advanced age
Representative David Scott with staffer Chris Johnson, in Statuary Hall after the State of the Union Address
Florida Democrat Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick resigned from Congress on Monday after allegedly stealing millions in COVID relief funds, some of which she is accused of spending on a glitzy ring. She has denied the allegations.
Cherfilus-McCormick, 46, was awaiting punishment after being accused of using millions that her family’s health care company received during the pandemic to fuel her political campaign.
Back in March, President Donald Trump revealed the terminal diagnosis of a member of the House GOP conference as well.
Republican congressman Neal Dunn, a father-of-three, has a terminal diagnosis, and Trump said at the time that the outlook was so grim that doctors pronounced ‘he would be dead by June.’
Speaker Mike Johnson, who was sitting next to the President, appeared stunned that day as Trump grinned at reporters.
‘Okay, that wasn’t public,’ Johnson quipped at the time.
Dunn had not planned to run for reelection in 2026.
Concerns about the health and average age of government leaders has been highly scrutinized in recent months as members of Congress of both political parties have experienced health scares, with some dying in office.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer was rushed to the hospital for dehydration as scorching temperatures in Washington, D.C., reached 100 degrees last summer.
The senator, 74, was at the Senate gym in the morning and reportedly ‘got lightheaded,’ according to his office.
The top Democrat was taken to the hospital ‘out of an abundance of caution,’ his office also noted at the time.
Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, 83, fell last February and has subsequently been seen using a wheelchair and walking with an aide in the Capitol hallways. He also experienced a fall in December of 2024, which resulted in a sprained wrist.
McConnell has suffered on-camera ‘freezing’ episodes which have raised serious health concerns.
In August 2023, McConnell froze for 30 seconds when asked if he would run for re-election in Kentucky as he made another troubling appearance just weeks after suddenly stopping in the middle of a press conference.
The then-81-year-old didn’t respond when a reporter pressed him on his political future. McConnell has ended up not running for reelection this year.
Democratic Congresswoman Maxine Waters, 87, upset some members of her party when she recently announced her plan to run for re-election later this year.
She is even slated to retake the gavel as chair of the US House Financial Services Committee as its most senior member, if Democrats win control of the House of Representatives in the midterm elections.
It has caused other Democrats to privately complain behind the scenes. Publicly, her challenger is urging her to ‘pass the baton.’
However, a few prominent lawmakers have – finally – read the writing on the wall.
Washington, DC, representative Eleanor Holmes Norton, 88, first planned to run for re-election to a 19th term. But she ended up terminating her bid in January.
And former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, 85, is not seeking re-election this year, after serving in Congress for 20 terms.