Mo Brooks: Congress going into recess over the coronavirus sends the wrong message

(PIxabay, Wikicommons, YHN)

The coronavirus media-driven panic is underway and shows very little sign of stopping anytime soon.

The impact on stock markets and the economy have already been seen. The travel industry is feeling the impact, some schools are already jumping to canceling classes and big-time public events will be next as some ponder not allowing crowds during March Madness. When all of these things come together, we will be in full-blown panic mode.

Members of Congress and even President Donald Trump were at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) where, apparently, someone who has been deen diagnosed with this illness has been identified.

Some members of Congress have self-quarantined.

Now, some are suggesting that Congress go into recess and not meet under these circumstances.

This is absurd.

U.S. Representative Mo Brooks (R-Huntsville) is having none of this.

Brooks, who was in attendance at CPAC, called into WVNN radio Monday morning to say he is feeling fine and disagrees that Congress should go into a recess.

Brooks added that doing so “sends entirely the wrong message out.”

“The only people who have any kind of risk that is above average are the people that are elderly with some kind of immune deficiency,” he told “The Dale Jackson Show.”

Brooks also noted that he didn’t even think talk of recess was serious, saying, “I thought my staff was joking. But there appears to be some serious concern in Washington to the point where we ought to shut down Congress, and that’s just the wrong message.”

Brooks later joked about the ages of the people remaining in the race for president, saying that they might want to be concerned about debates.

My takeaway:

Mo Brooks is right about this. There is no reason to further worry an entire country that is needlessly on edge and fearful. If you shut down the most visible part of the federal government over this, it sends a message that this is far more serious than it is.

If anything, Congress needs to be ready to act if needed. Members don’t need to be hiding in their homes because the people on TV want to report on what they want to be “Trump’s Katrina.”

Listen:

Dale Jackson is a contributing writer to Yellowhammer News and hosts a talk show from 7-11 am weekdays on WVNN.

Recent in Opinion

Alabama’s reading and math performance is improving, and even outlets like The New York Times are taking notice. The state made changes that broke from traditional education approaches, and early results are strong enough that other states are now being urged to follow similar models. This video looks at what Alabama changed, why it worked, […]

7. NCAA President Charlie Baker says the organization is not in a position to further sanction Alabama for playing Charles Bediako during his temporary eligibility under court order, as losing in court does not allow punishment of the winning party, so Alabama’s three wins will remain intact with no record vacating required, despite teams like […]

Next Post

4-year-old red panda dies at Birmingham Zoo

Yellowhammer News March 09, 2020