Former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge rushed to hospital after stroke

Former Pennsylvania Gov. and U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge was rushed to the hospital by ambulance Wednesday after suffering a stroke, his family said.

“The Ridge family wishes to share the following news about Tom,” the family announced on his Twitter feed Wednesday.

“Tom Ridge, the 43rd governor of Pennsylvania and first U.S. secretary of homeland security, was transferred by ambulance to a hospital in the Washington DC area this morning after having suffered a stroke at his residence in Bethesda, MD,” the family wrote, adding that the 75-year-old Ridge “was conscious when he arrived at the emergency department and later underwent a successful procedure to remove a blood clot. He remains in critical but stable condition.”

In this Jan. 3, 2020, file photo, Tom Ridge, who has serves as Secretary of Homeland Security, Pennsylvania Governor and U.S. Congressman, speaks in Erie, Pa.
In this Jan. 3, 2020, file photo, Tom Ridge, who has serves as Secretary of Homeland Security, Pennsylvania Governor and U.S. Congressman, speaks in Erie, Pa.


In this Jan. 3, 2020, file photo, Tom Ridge, who has serves as Secretary of Homeland Security, Pennsylvania Governor and U.S. Congressman, speaks in Erie, Pa. (Christopher Millette/)

They went on to request “prayers for a full recovery” and promised updates.

Ridge, a Republican, served as the first homeland security secretary from 2003 to 2005 and is credited with creating the color-coded terrorism risk advisory system still in use today.

In 2016 he said he would not vote for Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton, but in 2020 he said he would vote for Joe Biden, his first-ever vote for a Democratic presidential candidate, on the grounds that it was imperative to reject Trumpism, citing the then-president’s “reprehensible behavior” and the need to “put country over party.”

“I cannot help but compare our current situation dealing with a global health pandemic to my time leading the Department of Homeland Security following the 9/11 terror attacks,” he wrote in The Philadelphia Inquirer last September. “There are many similarities to our national response. Those similarities, however, do not include presidential leadership.”

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