U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy announces his retirement at a press conference in Montpelier on November 15, 2021. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Updated at 9:33 p.m.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., underwent emergency hip replacement surgery Thursday and was recovering at a hospital in the Washington, D.C., area, according to his Senate office.ย 

The 82-year-old senator was hospitalized after falling Wednesday night at his home in McLean, Virginia, and breaking his hip, his office said. 

โ€œHaving been born blind in one eye, the Senator has had a lifelong struggle with reduced depth perception,โ€ Leahyโ€™s office said in a written statement Thursday morning. โ€œHe has taken some remarkable dingers over the years but this one finally caught up with him.โ€

Doctors recommended he undergo surgery to repair his hip, โ€œas soon as possible,โ€ Leahyโ€™s office wrote. In a second statement Thursday evening, his office said that the surgery had been successful and that he โ€œis expected to begin a physical therapy regimen after sufficient healingโ€ that should enable him to take daily walks with his wife, Marcelle Leahy. 

โ€œPatrick and Marcelle are overwhelmed and humbled by the outpouring of support, and they are deeply grateful for all of the kind and encouraging messages they have received,โ€ Leahyโ€™s office said.  

Since the U.S. Senate is on a weeklong recess for the Independence Day holiday, Leahyโ€™s absence should not pose immediate problems for the razor-thin Democratic majority. But because the Senate is divided 50-50, with Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris casting tie-breaking votes, a prolonged recovery could slow his partyโ€™s agenda. 

Leahy was briefly hospitalized last year after presiding over the impeachment trial of then-President Donald Trump. The senator later said he had sought care after experiencing muscle spasms and that doctors had since given him a โ€œclean bill of health.โ€

Leahy has represented Vermont in the U.S. Senate for nearly half a century. He announced last November that he would not run for reelection this year.

Previously VTDigger's editor-in-chief.