Rudy Giuliani Hospitalized With Pneumonia, Listed in Critical but Stable Condition
Rudy Giuliani, the 81-year-old former New York City mayor and longtime ally of President Donald Trump, has been hospitalized in Florida with pneumonia and placed on mechanical ventilation, his spokesperson confirmed this week.
The news shocked many who had seen Giuliani just days earlier, still appearing on his nightly broadcast — coughing, but seemingly on his feet.
What Happened
According to a statement from his spokesperson Ted Goodman, Giuliani was admitted to a Florida hospital after a respiratory illness rapidly overwhelmed his body. Doctors placed him on mechanical ventilation to maintain adequate oxygen levels and stabilize his condition.
Goodman described his current status as “critical but stable,” adding that the hospitalization was being treated as a “precautionary measure” while his medical team monitors his progress closely.
The statement also noted that Giuliani is now breathing on his own, with family members and his primary medical provider present at his bedside.
The Days Before Admission
Just days before his hospitalization, Giuliani appeared on his regular broadcast, America’s Mayor Live, where he told viewers his voice was “a little under the weather.” He leaned closer to the microphone and joked that he wouldn’t be able to speak as loudly as usual.
To viewers, it looked like a minor cold. Few would have guessed how quickly his condition would deteriorate.
A Pre-Existing Condition Made Things Worse
Goodman’s statement revealed a significant complicating factor. Giuliani was previously diagnosed with restrictive airway disease — a condition directly tied to his presence at Ground Zero in the immediate aftermath of the September 11 attacks.
“He ran toward the towers to help those in need,” Goodman wrote, “which later led to a diagnosis of restrictive airway disease.”
That condition, Goodman explained, added serious complications to an already serious respiratory illness, making the virus harder to fight and ultimately requiring mechanical intervention to keep his oxygen levels stable.
It’s a detail that puts the severity of his current illness in context. For most people, pneumonia is serious but manageable. For someone with compromised lung function stemming from September 11 exposure, the same illness can become life-threatening far more quickly.
Trump Responds
President Donald Trump, who has maintained a close relationship with Giuliani over decades of political partnership, addressed the hospitalization publicly on his Truth Social platform.
Trump called Giuliani the “Best Mayor in the History of New York City” and described him as a “True Warrior.” He also used the moment to direct criticism at Democrats, suggesting they bore some responsibility for Giuliani’s current state — a claim he offered without supporting detail.
The post drew significant attention, both for its warm tribute to Giuliani and for its political framing of a health crisis.
Who Is Rudy Giuliani
For younger readers, Giuliani’s name may be most associated with the legal battles that defined his recent years. But his biography spans decades of American public life.
He served as mayor of New York City from 1994 to 2001, a tenure that earned him widespread recognition — and significant controversy — for his aggressive approach to crime reduction. His leadership on and after September 11 earned him the informal title “America’s Mayor,” a reputation that carried him through years of public life and political influence.
More recently, Giuliani became one of Trump’s most prominent legal defenders during and after the 2020 presidential election. He led a wave of lawsuits challenging the election results — all of which failed in court. In the aftermath, courts in New York and Washington D.C. revoked his law license over what they described as unsubstantiated claims about the election.
He was also sued for defamation by two Georgia election workers who said his public statements had endangered their lives. That case was reportedly settled last year.
Last summer, he suffered a fractured vertebra in a car accident in New Hampshire and was subsequently seen at public events using a wheelchair.
At 81, and now hospitalized with a serious respiratory illness complicated by pre-existing lung damage, Giuliani’s health has become a story that reaches far beyond political circles.
What Happens Next
No timeline has been given for his recovery or discharge. His spokesperson’s statement was measured and optimistic — Giuliani is breathing on his own, he is being monitored, his family is with him — but it stopped well short of any clear prognosis.
For the people who remember him at his most powerful — standing at the podium on September 12, 2001, giving a shattered city something to hold onto — the image of an 81-year-old man on a ventilator in a Florida hospital is a complicated one to sit with.
Whatever one thinks of the choices he made in the years that followed, the lung damage that now complicates his recovery is a direct consequence of the day he ran toward the smoke instead of away from it.
That part of the story, at least, is not in dispute.





