foxnews Press
Former lawmaker dying of cancer says Senate full of 'blowhards' when it should be greatest deliberative body
Images
Former Sen. Ben Sasse reveals his Stage 4 cancer diagnosis, detailing his treatment, family reflections, and faith as he faces a limited life expectancy in a candid interview on "Interesting Times."
Former Sen. Ben Sasse said in an interview Thursday that America's political and media ecosystem has become a distraction from deeper cultural decay.
"We’re not going to talk about politics at all," Sasse told Ross Douthat of The New York Times during the "Interesting Times" podcast as he undergoes treatment for stage 4 pancreatic cancer. "What we’re going to talk about is the fact that we were living through a technological revolution… and we were living through institutional collapse."
Sasse, who left the Senate in 2023 after eight years, described his diagnosis as a "death sentence" but used the conversation to frame a broader critique of American public life, arguing that politics and media have shrunk into reactive, tribal spaces.
He said the rise of digital technology has reshaped how Americans think, interact and form community, pulling attention away from real-world relationships and toward fragmented online engagement. According to Sasse, this shift has hollowed out institutions while amplifying extreme voices.
BERNIE SANDERS SAYS TRUMP'S NOT STUPID TO REALIZE 'SYSTEM IS BROKEN,' EVEN AS HE MAKES IT WORSE
New-onset diabetes or worsening blood sugar control can be an early indicator in some patients. (Getty Images/iStock)
"The weirdos are crowding everybody else out," Sasse said. "All of our outlets have an incentive to go narrow and deep, there isn’t any 60 percent audience that’s ever going to exist again."
He argued that both political parties and media ecosystems increasingly rely on amplifying fringe behavior from the opposing side, rather than solving substantive problems.
"There’s a ton of incentive to find some nut job on the left or some nut job on the right," Sasse said. "The problem with that kind of nut picking is it doesn’t ever solve a problem."
WILLIAM BENNETT, ROB NOEL: AMERICA'S MORAL DECLINE DEMANDS ACTION. WHAT CONSERVATIVES MUST DO NOW
An early morning visitor to the National Mall is silhouetted against the orange sky of daybreak behind the U.S. Capitol Dome on April 1, 2026, in Washington, D.C. (J. David Ake/Getty Images)
He reflected on his own time in the Senate, acknowledging that his approach, focusing on civic norms and institutional reform, often clashed with the incentives of modern politics.
"I wasn’t a very good politician," he said. "I am way too idealistic about what I believe in America to be a very good dealmaker."
Sasse reiterated that view, arguing that political institutions have failed to keep pace with broader societal changes driven by technology and cultural fragmentation.
"Politics barely matters for what we’re going through right now," he said. "This institution is filled with blowhards."
BEN SASSE OPENS UP ABOUT FAITH, TERMINAL CANCER DIAGNOSIS IN EMOTIONAL INTERVIEW
He warned that the digital age has replaced shared national experiences with individualized content streams, weakening social cohesion and making constructive dialogue more difficult.
"We don’t have any shared cultural data anymore," he said, contrasting today’s media environment with earlier eras when Americans consumed common programming and could engage more easily with one another.
Sasse expressed cautious optimism that Americans may eventually adapt to the current information environment, learning to filter out misinformation and extreme rhetoric.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
"If we survive, one thing that I’m nearly certain of is we will figure out how to have discussions in spite of all of the noise," he said.
"There’s going to be a lot more normies who show up and roll their eyes," he added.
CJ Womack is an associate editor at Fox News.
CJ joined Fox News Digital's team in 2026, which highlights the vital role journalism plays in shaping politics and culture. He has years of experience analyzing and reporting on the news media.
CJ graduated from Long Beach State University in 2025 with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and a minor in Journalism.
Story tips can be sent to cj.womack@fox.com, and you can follow on Twitter.
Get all the stories you need-to-know from the most powerful name in news delivered first thing every morning to your inbox.
By entering your email and clicking the Subscribe button, you agree to the Fox News Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, and
agree to receive content and promotional communications from Fox News. You understand that you can
opt-out at any time.
Subscribed
You've successfully subscribed to this newsletter!
Comments
You must be logged in to comment.