Joe Biden delivers first public remarks since prostate cancer diagnosis: ‘Our politics have become so divided and bitter'
Participating in a Memorial Day commemoration, Joe Biden made his first public address since the announcement of his Stage 4 prostate cancer diagnosis at a Biden family event in his home state of Delaware on Friday.
'My friends, Memorial Day is about something profound,' a somewhat fired-up Biden declared. 'Our politics have become so divided and bitter. All the years I have been doing this, I never thought we would get to this point, but we are.'
He added: 'Our troops do not wear a uniform that says I'm a Democrat or a Republican. It says, I am an American!'
While the 82-year-old former commander-in-chief did cough a couple of times during the short speech, it appeared he was just trying to clear his throat as he attempted to deliver an energized address to the audience, which was filled with his family, friends and state officials. He also used the speech to acknowledge his deceased son Beau, who died ten years ago from brain cancer and served in the Iraq War.
'I know for many of you, Memorial Day is deeply personal. For the Bidens, this day is the 10th anniversary of the loss of my son Beau, who served in Iraq,' he said. 'It is a hard day.'
The former president's office announced last week that he had been diagnosed with an 'aggressive' form of cancer after doctors found a small nodule on his prostate, resulting in further evaluations. Eventually, it was discovered that Biden had prostate cancer that was 'characterized by a Gleason score of 9 (Grade Group 5) with metastasis to the bone.'
'While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive which allows for effective management,' a Biden spokesperson added. 'The president and his family are reviewing treatment options with his physicians.'
The cancer diagnosis was revealed as the former president, his family and former White House aides have been under fire over
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Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Frank Chopp, a force that reshaped Washington's political landscape
House Speaker Frank Chopp delivering remarks in the House of Representatives on Jan. 11, 2016, the first day of the legislative session. (Photo courtesy of Legislative Support Services) Frank Chopp, a citizen activist who became the state of Washington's longest-serving House speaker, spent a half-century relentlessly agitating for social change. It seemed fitting then that Chopp, who died in March, would deliver a final call for action to hundreds attending his memorial service in Bellevue on Sunday. 'We have made so much progress, but let us also remember how lucky we are,' he says in a taped excerpt of a speech on the opening day of a legislative session. 'None of us go without a paycheck, none of us go hungry, none of us go homeless, none of us lack health care, none of us lack the opportunity to get an education.' 'The people we represent just want what we have,' he said. 'So we have a lot to do. Let's get to work.' 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Yona Makowski, a longtime budget analyst with the House Democratic Caucus, said Chopp was 'willing to break tradition and adapt government procedures' to achieve broader objectives. 'I'll lose my composure if I talk about what Frank meant to me,' she said, instead offering what her family members thought of him. 'They knew him from me talking about him at the dinner table.' 'My son thought he was a great strategist in getting meaningful things done to help disadvantaged people. My daughter compared him to the Wizard of Oz behind the curtain, but if the wizard was actually the hero,' Makowski said. 'And lastly, my late husband perhaps said it best, Frank was a very good man.'


Newsweek
21 minutes ago
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Boulder Attack Videos Show People Being Set on Fire
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Boston Globe
23 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Can elite universities remain global?
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