Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine has tested positive for COVID-19. Collins' office said the veteran senator tested positive late Thursday afternoon, several hours after voting to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Collins' office says in a statement that the 69-year-old senator would isolate and work remotely in accordance with federal guidelines. The office said she was experiencing mild symptoms.
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Newscenter Maine reports that the senator attended the Gridiron dinner in Washington last Saturday and learned Thursday morning that two people at her table had tested positive for the virus.
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Collins wore a mask onto the Senate floor to cast her vote for Jackson later Thursday. She received her positive test result around 4 p.m., Newscenter Maine reported.
The Senate is on a two-week recess now, and it wasn't immediately clear when Collins would return to Maine as she isolates in Washington, D.C.
The only member of Maine's four-member congressional delegation who has not tested positive for COVID-19 at some point is Democratic Rep. Chellie Pingree.
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Democratic Rep. Jared Golden tested positive last month, and independent Sen. Angus King tested positive last year.