Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Ben Sasse: I Got Terminal Cancer! But While I Am Alive, I'm Gonna Fight Trump!

Ben Sasse is dying. But while he is alive, he is opposing Trump.

Former Nebraska Republican senator and former president of the University of Florida announces he has terminal cancer. Ben Sasse, who resigned in 2023 to avoid a primary challenge from a MAGAland challenger joined the Gators. He left the university likely because of this as well as lying saying it was his wife's personal health issues. 

Sasse is a critic of the president.

Sean Hannity, an annoying far right media personality was criticized by Sasse as a propagandist who conducts softball interviews with the president, hence the nickname, "Softball Hannity." 

Hannity didn't take kind to Sasse criticisms. Hell, I believe Hannity had pressed for Google to shield images of his head being placed on a softball.

Sasse, 53, made the announcement on social media, saying he learned of the disease last week and is “now marching to the beat of a faster drummer.”

“This is a tough note to write, but since a bunch of you have started to suspect something, I’ll cut to the chase,” Sasse wrote. “Last week I was diagnosed with metastasized, stage-four pancreatic cancer, and am gonna die.”

Sasse was first elected to the Senate in 2014 and won reelection in 2020. He resigned in 2023 to serve as the 13th president of the University of Florida after a contentious approval process. He left that post the following year after his wife was diagnosed with epilepsy.

Sasse was an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump, and he was one of seven Republican senators to vote to convict the former president of “incitement of insurrection” after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Sasse, who has degrees from Harvard, St. John’s College and Yale, worked as an assistant secretary of Health and Human Services under President George W. Bush. He then served as president of Midland University before he ran for the Senate. Midland is a small Christian university in eastern Nebraska.

Sasse and his wife have three children.

“I’m not going down without a fight. One sub-part of God’s grace is found in the jawdropping advances science has made the past few years in immunotherapy and more,” Sasse wrote. “Death and dying aren’t the same — the process of dying is still something to be lived.”

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