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Former Secretary of Homeland Security
Tom J. Ridge discussed his role in the
Hurricane Katrina crisis, terrorism, and
his own political aspirations in an interview
yesterday with
The Harvard Crimson.
He played an integral
role in post-9/11
governance when he
was asked by President
George W. Bush
to leave his office as
Governor of Pennsylvania
to take the role
of the first Assistant to
the President for Homeland Security.
He later would become Secretary of
Homeland Security, and would oversee
the creation of the Department of
Homeland Security.
Currently, Ridge is serving as a visiting
fellow at the Harvard Institute of
Politics.
The Harvard Crimson: The establishment
of the Office of Homeland Security
constituted the largest government
reorganization in half a century. What
did it feel like to take on such a large role
in homeland security after 9/11?
Tom Ridge: I felt bad about leaving
a job that I loved immensely. I’m very
proud and privileged to have served as
governor. But in a post-9/11 environment,
every American was asking ‘What
can I do?’ and the President gave me an
opportunity to make a contribution and
hopefully most people will conclude that
I did.
THC: When you left the Department,
did you foresee the possibility of government mishandling an event like Katrina?
TR: Not only did we foresee the possibility,
we anticipated it. One of my great
disappointments with the government’s
response to Katrina was that the procedures
and plans that we had developed in
anticipation of something as cataclysmic
as Katrina were not applied in a timely
or effective way. No
one could have prevented
the levees
from breaking, but
I think much of the
problem with the
Katrina disaster was
the failure of political
and government
leadership at the
local, mayor, state,
and federal level.
THC: Would
you take any personal
responsibility
for what occurred after Katrina?
TR: I think it was more of a leadership
challenge, and for that I take absolutely
no responsibility. My huge disappointment
is that it’s not as if my team
and others who were still in the department
had not anticipated there might be
a time when the state and local resources
are overwhelmed by a catastrophic event.
I regret, frankly that I wasn’t in charge
because I think we would have done
things differently.
Procedures and
protocols are not
sexy stuff, but
there are certain
operational structures
that we built
to handle precisely
that kind of event
that were either
ignored or deployed
later than it
should have been.
THC: Do you
foresee the possibility
of ever running for the United
States Senate?
TR: No.
THC: Do you have any further political
aspirations?
TR: I would like to help the Republican
Party find its voice. People are worried
about our messengers, but before
we have a messenger we better figure out
what our message is. I would [also] like
to work with men and women on both sides of the aisle who bring a respect and
civility to political discourse that I think
we’ve abandoned. There are so many issues
out there that are controversial and
neither party has been willing to invest
the political capital to solve them. I’d like
to see us try to do it in a bipartisan way.
THC: Former VP Dick Cheney has
said that Obama will “raise the risk to the
American people of another attack.” Do
you agree with this?
TR: I’m not going to respond specifically
to Cheney because I think the
White House has done that. The one caveat
I would say with regard to how the
administration has begun to handle this
is that to call terrorist attacks ‘manmade
disasters’ doesn’t make sense.
What I’m concerned about is that
the characterization of our effort against
these extremists has rhetorically been
minimized. I haven’t seen anything
that President Obama has done yet that
makes me fearful that we will be less than
vigorous in our approach to dealing with
these extremists. I just think the language
is so politically correct – we ought to call
it what it is.
THC: President Obama has been
proposing some form of amnesty plan
for illegal immigrants. Given your background,
do you believe this is a correct
plan for immigration policy?
TR: I said a long time ago that the reality
of identifying and returning to their
country of origin the X million of illegals
who are here is a fantasy. We need to
face up to the reality that Congress and
Presidents since the mid-80s have failed
to deal with the issue. Now is an opportunity
to forge a bipartisan solution. We
need to find some way to legalize their
presence; not [by] granting them citizenship-we may put them at the end of the
line-but not [by] sending them all back.
—Staff writer Evan T.R. Rosenman can be
reached at erosenman@fas.harvard.edu.
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