
Credit: Sola Media
It began with what appeared to be a plausible explanation, as these things occasionally do. Ben Sasse competes in sprint triathlons. He pushes his body and trains hard. When he started having chronic back and abdominal pain in late October 2025, his first thought was that he had pulled a muscle. He was fifty-three years old, physically fit, and used to experiencing discomfort as a consequence of maintaining his fitness. It took some time for the realization that something more serious was going on. Seldom does it.
He went to the doctor in November because the pain had gotten so bad. Tests were performed by his physician. Nothing was found. A gastroenterologist was brought in with a working theory of undiagnosed lactose intolerance or celiac disease, which would turn out to be anything but commonplace. In December, a full-body scan was requested. A doctor called 45 minutes after the imaging. Sasse instructed the doctor to cease hedging after hearing hesitation on the line. When the answer finally arrived, it was straightforward: the doctor described Ben Sasse’s torso as “chock-full of tumors.”
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Benjamin Eric Sasse |
| Date of Birth | February 22, 1972 |
| Birthplace | Plainview, Nebraska, USA |
| Party | Republican |
| Senate Tenure | January 2015 – January 2023 (Nebraska) |
| Education | Harvard University (BA); St. John’s College (MA); Yale University (MA, MPhil, PhD) |
| Previous Roles | President, University of Florida; President, Midland University; Asst. Secretary, HHS (Bush administration) |
| Spouse | Melissa McLeod (married 1995) |
| Children | Three daughters, Corrie and Alex (20s), son Breck (14 at diagnosis) |
| Diagnosis | Stage 4 metastasized pancreatic cancer (announced December 2025) |
| Additional Cancers Found | Lymphoma, vascular, lung, and liver cancer |
| Treatment | Experimental drug daraxonrasib |
| Tumor Reduction | 76% since beginning treatment |
| Podcast | “Not Dead Yet” |
| Reference Website | Ben Sasse – Wikipedia |
In the days that followed that call, Ben Sasse received a diagnosis that was, by all accounts, overwhelming. The discovery of at least four other cancer types—lymphoma, vascular cancer, lung cancer, and what he called “bad” liver cancer—compounded the initial discovery of Stage 4 metastasized pancreatic cancer, which Sasse himself has bluntly described as “a death sentence”. Five malignancies. 54 years old. in a man who, only a few weeks prior, had been preparing for triathlons.
The response to his public announcement of the diagnosis in December 2025 was noteworthy, in part due to Sasse’s political background and in part to the way he discussed it. Sasse has never fit the mold of a conventional partisan. He was one of seven Republican senators to vote in favor of Donald Trump’s conviction in the second impeachment trial. Over the years, he has received criticism from both his own party and the opposition in roughly equal measure—possibly the closest thing to a compliment in modern American politics. His announcement lacked the cautious message management and hedging found in most political communications. He referred to it as a death sentence. He stated that his life expectancy was three to four months. He didn’t make it softer.
It is more difficult to classify what transpired next. Sasse started taking daraxonrasib, an experimental medication. Since he began treatment, the drug has decreased the size of his tumor by 76%. This figure sounds almost unbelievably good, and it might be, considering that he has also described the cancer as acting like weeds, with some tumors already seeding in new areas.
The medication is somewhat effective. Additionally, it makes it harder for his body to produce new skin, which leads to bleeding in places that shouldn’t be bleeding, as he put it. About 99 days after his initial prognosis, in an April 2026 video interview with New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, Sasse sat speaking while dried blood was visible all over his face. He made a joke about maintaining employment in the pharmacy sector. He didn’t appear to be a man exhibiting poise. He appeared to have simply concluded that this was his reality and that trying to act otherwise would be a waste of his remaining time.
It’s not the blood, but there’s something about that interview that’s hard to ignore. It’s the way he thinks. Sasse holds a PhD in history from Yale and has the thoughtful habits of someone who has read extensively about people’s struggles with unchangeable circumstances. He compared death to a wicked thief, something that should be truly despised, but he also talked about the serenity that comes from passing through it. He made an oblique reference to a framework that views death as a final foe rather than a smooth transition. He described cancer as a helpful remedy for his own delusional self-idolatry. It’s a powerful statement. Additionally, it’s likely more truthful than anything he’s said in his eight years in Washington as a former senator and university president.
He claimed that neither the pain nor the medication, nor even the uncertainty of how much time is left, is the most difficult aspect. It’s his kids. A 14-year-old son who will be fatherless when he turns 16. He might not be present when their twentysomething daughters walk down the aisle. He didn’t act as though those ideas fit neatly into philosophy or religion. He sat with them and gave them names. That’s the part of this story that sticks with you the most. He continues to record his podcast, conduct interviews, and make the decision to be audible and present. The name of the podcast is “Not Dead Yet.” It’s a reference to Monty Python. He also mentioned that, briefly displaying what appeared to be a smile.
The American Cancer Society can be contacted at cancer.org or 1-800-227-2345 if you or someone you know has been impacted by a cancer diagnosis.

