After return, Kirk pushes bipartisanship in Senate

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Kirk was elected to the U.S. House in 2000. Obama lost a primary that year to Democratic Rep. Bobby Rush.

While Kirk is supportive of new gun control legislation, he said he doesn't see Obama's call for new legislation addressing climate change going anywhere at the moment. Kirk, who has been supportive of such efforts in the past, and is considered one of the Senate's leading moderates, said he believed that there were not even enough Democrats to support a big push on the issue.

"I think a number of people on the Democratic side would say the bill is just around the corner, because they know that's what the audience would like to hear," he said. "But there's almost no chance of that bill in this Congress."

Since returning in January, Kirk said he has filled his time looking for ways to work together with members of both parties.

Kirk has formed a close bond with Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., referring to them as "a dynamic duo." Their friendship started before Kirk's stroke, Kirk said, and has continued upon his return. Manchin, along with Vice President Joe Biden, stood side-by-side with Kirk as he ascended the Capitol steps.

Kirk said he and Manchin had a lot of quality time on a boat that Manchin partially owns called "the Black Tie" along with other senators, including Schumer, who Kirk said "knows the lyrics to almost every major hit of the 1970s. It's a bit uncanny."

With "the crew of 'the Black Tie'" he said, referring to his fellow senators, "you get that social bond when senators would actually have a drink together even commute together.

"Only when you have that can you get over all the difficulties and the centrifugal nature of Washington and the partisan process," Kirk said.

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