No visitors: Congress hunkers down against coronavirus
WASHINGTON — The notes started popping up on Congress’ office doors this week. Elbow greetings only. A six-foot radius. And that’s for lawmakers who are taking visitors at all.
“No offence,” read one, posted outside the office of North Carolina Rep. David Price, D-N.C. “Just makes sense.”
Welcome to the land of “no contact meetings,” where the nation’s highest-profile hand-shakers and baby-kissers are politicking during a pandemic that wields more power than any of them. Coronavirus doesn’t give a rip about who controls the House, Senate or the presidency after Election Day. Nor does it discriminate between elites and the people they govern in the bustling international city of about 30,000 workers on Capitol Hill.
“We’re addressing the realities of life,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters Thursday.