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"We want to make sure that when she comes back to work, that operation I just described ... is up and running and is as strong as it can be under the circumstances," he said. After the November elections, when House Democrats chose committee members from their decimated ranks, the gregarious Giffords was the chief advocate for the studious Smith to fill the Armed Services Committee slot. They have worked closely on the panel since Giffords' election in 2006. In a few weeks, Smith will hold a town-hall meeting with Giffords' staff in Tucson, part of a trip that had been in the works before the shooting. He visited Giffords at the Houston hospital on March 4, his third trip since the shooting. "She's getting better every time. It's all a matter of reconnecting, relearning," he said. Wasserman Schultz, who has worked to get House Democrats re-elected, made sure Giffords was among the top 15 in the party's program to assist vulnerable incumbents. Giffords won re-election in 2010 by just 4,156 votes in a swing district. At the end of 2010, she was on good footing financially with $285,501 in her campaign account. Wasserman Schultz recalled her own health crisis -- breast cancer at age 40
-- and the importance of girlfriends. For Giffords, "I want to be there as a girlfriend," said the four-term Florida lawmaker. Wasserman Schultz visited Giffords on March 5, four weeks after her last trip, and said she was amazed at the progress. She said Giffords is very responsive and talking, though "not conversationalist." Gillibrand, a former House member elected in the same year as Giffords, was at her bedside when she opened her eyes for the first time days after the shooting. In a letter accompanying the invitation for the Giffords for Congress fundraiser, Gillibrand, Smith and Wasserman Schultz wrote, "We look forward to seeing her again soon and to the day that she will rejoin us in the halls of Congress." On March 4, several members of Giffords' staff made a special hospital trip to the National Intrepid Center of Excellence at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. The facility focuses on traumatic brain injuries of service members, especially those wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. The physicians provided insights for Giffords' aides. "This is one of the top-line treatment centers in the world," Karamargin said. "We are learning way more than we ever wanted to about this particular aspect of health care."
[Associated
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