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Trump: GOP senator had 'close call' with fall

President Trump put pressure on the recent head injuries sustained by Sen. Kevin Kramer (RN.D.) after slipping onto the ice during a home trip, and hoped he could recover quickly. He hoped that lawmakers would “pass through a lot.”

“Our great senator from North Dakota, Sen. Kevin Kramer, has only recently been injured by sliding on the ice and hitting his head. He is now comfortable resting. But I've gone through a lot, Trump wrote in a post about Truth Society late Tuesday. “His great wife, Chris, is with him. phone. “

“Please cheer up Kevin right away and thank Chris for her quick and extremely vigilant towards Kevin's difficult moments,” he added.

Cramer, 64, shared news of his injuries on Monday, informing the public that he is currently recovering from a concussion and a “cerebral hemorrhage.”

The senator said he slid over the ice on Sunday, fell “hardly” and “hit the back of my head.”

“I don't remember anything from the fall until I arrive at the Sanford Health emergency room with Chris,” Kramer said in a Facebook post, and after multiple tests and CT scans, he finally said “severity.” Concussions, confiscations, seizures, and slight brain bleeding.”

“The wounds on my head didn't stop oozing out, so doctors punched some staple foods into the lacerations and accepted me,” the North Dakota Republican wrote.

On Monday, the senator added that he was doing better “with a slight brain bleeding and a rather bad headache.”

He also said it is still uncertain when he will return to Washington after his doctor advised him to rest longer than “small.”

“This week will be daily, but we're ready to go back soon if we need it for the event,” Cramer wrote earlier this week.

The latest fall comes after a hand injury in June 2022 while moving a large rock. It rolled into his hand, crushing his ring and pinky finger.

Cramer is currently serving her second term in the Upper Chamber against Democratic challenger Katrina Christiansen since November. He was first elected to the Senate in 2018 when he defeated former North Dakota Senator Heidi Heitkamp (D).

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