Chuck Schumer hospitalized for dehydration amid sweltering DC heat wave


Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer was briefly hospitalized on Wednesday for dehydration, a spokesman for his office said.

The leader of the Senate Democratic caucus was back on the Hill later in the day. He is expecting a vote in the coming days on the GOPโ€™s budget reconciliation bill, which Schumerโ€™s caucus is likely to oppose on a party-line vote.

Axios first reported the senatorโ€™s condition. The Independent has reached out for further comment.

The District of Columbia is in the middle of a heat wave exacerbated by the historically muggy conditions that accompany the summer season in the nationโ€™s capital and the surrounding region. Wednesdayโ€™s temperatures around the capital felt as high as 105 degrees Fahrenheit due to humidity, according to one weather monitor.

A spokesperson told The Hill that Schumer began feeling symptoms of dehydration in the Senateโ€™s gym facilities.

Chuck Schumer was hospitalized after feeling symptoms of dehydration on Wednesday morning, a spokesperson said
Chuck Schumer was hospitalized after feeling symptoms of dehydration on Wednesday morning, a spokesperson said (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

โ€œLeader Schumer was at the Senate gym this morning and got lightheaded,โ€ the spokesperson told the news outlet. โ€œOut of an abundance of caution, he went to the hospital to be treated for dehydration and is now back at work in the Capitol.โ€

โ€œHe wants to remind everyone to drink some water and stay out of the heat,โ€ they added.

The Senate vote on the GOPโ€™s reconciliation package is being watched intently as Schumerโ€™s counterpart, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, struggles to get Republicans behind the package. Thatโ€™s despite stronger cuts to Medicaid than those present in the House version of the legislation, and the changes made by the Senateโ€™s parliamentarian this week to make the bill passable via the reconciliation process โ€” which requires just 51 votes, rather than 60.

Schumerโ€™s home state of New York was the site of a major political battle on Tuesday evening as state assemblyman Zohran Mamdani defeated Andrew Cuomo, the former governor, in a Democratic primary for the mayoral race. Eric Adams, the cityโ€™s current Democratic mayor, is running as an independent in November after facing calls for his resignation over a corruption scandal.

In a statement late Wednesday morning, Schumer congratulated Mamdani. He, like House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and a number of other elected officials in the state, did not make endorsements in the contest where Mamdani, a 33-year-old progressive, pulled off a stunning upset victory on Tuesday.

โ€œI have known @ZohranKMamdani since we worked together to provide debt relief for thousands of beleaguered taxi drivers & fought to stop a fracked gas plant in Astoria. He ran an impressive campaign that connected with New Yorkers about affordability, fairness, & opportunity,โ€ wrote the senator on Wednesday.

Schumer, 74, is widely speculated to be a potential target for a primary challenge in the next election cycle. Calls for as much were expressed openly by Mamdani supporters such as the left-leaning journalist Ken Klippenstein on Twitter on Tuesday evening as results poured in.

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