Former Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge
knew.

Yesterday, the media reported that former (and first)
Secretary of Homeland Security, Tom Ridge, has a new book coming out where he
claims that: “he was pressured by top advisers to President George W. Bush to
raise the national threat level just before the 2004 election in what he
suspected was an effort to influence the vote.”

The New York Times reports that while Mr. Ridge “has no
evidence that politics motivated the discussion”
,
this spring the Obama administration announced that the Department of Homeland
Security would look into the effectiveness of the color-coded terrorist alert
system
.
This review of the system was corroborated by Maine Senator Susan Collins, who
sits on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee, and has
also spoken out in favor of a reconsideration of the terror alert system.

Current Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano
announced in late July that:

"I recently appointed a task force to review our
existing color- coded threat system," Napolitano said. "That review is under
way, and I mention it only to say that if a better, more effective system can be
found, that will be used instead of the current color-coded one, just to see how
-- the federal government and DHS rethinking what it needs to provide active
information to individuals, to businesses, to employers."

Review of the color-coded terror alert system is important to
both evaluate its effectiveness, but also to eliminate its susceptibility to
politicization and exploitation. Our national security is far too important to
be exploited for political gain. The public has a right to be safe and free and
properly informed, and a review of the color-coded terror alert system is a step
in the right direction.