Sen. Mark Warner mourns death of daughter Madison at 36
Virginia Sen. Mark Warner announced early Monday that his daughter Madison has died at age 36 after what the family described as a decades-long fight with juvenile diabetes and related health complications. Warner, a Democrat who has represented Virginia in the Senate since 2009, shared the news in a statement posted to X on April 20.
No cause-of-death details beyond the family's statement have been made public. No location for Madison's passing was disclosed. The family asked for privacy.
Warner and his wife, Lisa Collis, issued a joint statement that was brief and direct. As the Daily Caller reported, the senator's post appeared on X early Monday morning, accompanied by a photo.
"We are heartbroken beyond words by the passing of our beloved daughter, Madison, 36, after a decades-long battle with juvenile diabetes and other health issues. She filled our lives with love and laughter, and her absence leaves an immeasurable void."
The statement continued: "We are grateful for the loving support of friends and family during this difficult time and ask for privacy as we navigate this profound loss."
A family's private grief in a public arena
Warner and Collis share two other daughters, Eliza and Gillian. The family has largely kept its personal life out of the political spotlight, and the sparse details in Monday's announcement reflect that pattern. Warner's statement referenced "other health issues" alongside juvenile diabetes but did not elaborate.
Type 1 diabetes, often called juvenile diabetes, affects more than 1.7 million Americans, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Complications can be severe and cumulative, particularly over a lifetime of managing the disease. Madison Warner had evidently dealt with those complications since childhood.
Whatever one's politics, the loss of a child is a grief that transcends party lines. The Senate has seen its share of high-stakes disputes in recent months, but Monday's news drew a different kind of response from the chamber.
Bipartisan condolences across the aisle
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer offered a public statement of sympathy, as Breitbart reported.
"I want to express my deepest and dearest sympathies for my friend, Senator Mark Warner, his wife Lisa and the rest of their family as they mourn the terrible loss of their daughter Madison."
Vice President JD Vance also publicly offered condolences to the Warner family, a gesture noted in the same report.
Republican Sen. Mike Lee posted his own message on X. "Please join me in praying for Senator Mark Warner and his family," Lee wrote, as the Washington Examiner reported. "This is heartbreaking news."
The bipartisan nature of the response stands in contrast to the sharp divisions that have defined the Senate in recent years, from fights over funding for non-citizens to battles over executive branch authority.
Warner's Senate career and reelection bid
Warner has served in the upper chamber since January 6, 2009. He is currently seeking reelection to a fourth term this November. Before entering the Senate, he served as Virginia's governor. His career has placed him at the center of intelligence, technology, and fiscal policy debates on Capitol Hill.
The announcement comes during a period of intense activity in the Senate, where members have clashed over everything from Department of Homeland Security funding to judicial confirmations. Whether Warner steps back from public duties in the near term remains unclear. His statement offered no indication of his schedule going forward.
Several key questions remain unanswered. Warner's statement did not specify where or exactly when Madison died. The "other health issues" referenced alongside juvenile diabetes were not identified. No medical official, funeral home, or family representative beyond Warner himself has spoken publicly.
None of that is unusual for a family navigating a private loss in the glare of public office. The Warners asked for space, and that request deserves respect, from colleagues, from the press, and from the public.
The Senate is a place of constant combat over policy and power. Moments like this one remind everyone in the Capitol building and beyond that the people who serve there are still, at bottom, parents and spouses and neighbors carrying the same burdens as the rest of us.
There is no partisan angle to the death of a young woman at 36. There is only a family that lost a daughter, and a father who told the country about it in three short sentences.






