Former Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse announced Tuesday that he has been diagnosed with stage-four pancreatic cancer, saying the disease is terminal and that he does not expect to survive.
In a candid social media post, Sasse, 53, said the cancer has metastasized and described advanced pancreatic cancer as “a death sentence.” He added that while the diagnosis was devastating, it had also sharpened his sense of purpose. “We’re all on the clock,” he wrote. “The question is how we use the time we’re given.”
Sasse served in the U.S. Senate from 2015 until his resignation in 2023. During his time in office, he built a reputation as an intellectually inclined conservative willing to challenge his own party. That reputation was cemented in 2021, when he became one of seven Republican senators to vote to convict President Donald Trump for incitement of insurrection following the January 6 Capitol riot. Though the conviction failed, the vote defined Sasse’s public legacy and made him a polarizing figure within Republican politics.
Beyond impeachment, Sasse focused much of his legislative work on national security, the rise of China, Russian and Chinese disinformation campaigns, and the societal impact of artificial intelligence. He frequently argued that Congress had grown too passive and warned against the steady concentration of power in the executive branch.








