Dayton Daily News

McCain decides to end his cancer treatment

Former Vietnam POW has served in Congress since 1982.

- By John Wagner and Sean Sullivan

The Arizona GOP senator’s family said he has already outlived the prediction­s for his survival since his brain cancer diagnosis.

Sen. John McCain is discontinu­ing medical treatment, his family announced Friday, just more than a year after the maverick Republican from Arizona was diagnosed with brain cancer.

Their statement said McCain, who turns 82 this week, had surpassed expectatio­ns for his survival since his diagnoses last July of glioblasto­ma, a terminal form of brain cancer.

“But the progress of disease and the inexorable advance of age render their verdict” and the senator has decided to end medical treatment, the statement said.

McCain, a celebrated Navy pilot in the Vietnam War, has been absent from Washington since December. While undergoing treatment in Arizona, he has kept a low profile, issuing written statements on major news developmen­ts but offering the public few glimpses of his condition.

“I love my husband with all of my heart,” Cindy McCain wrote on Twitter Friday shortly after the family statement was released. “God bless everyone who has cared for my husband along this journey.”

During a long and sometimes polarizing political career, McCain has served in the Senate for more than three decades and twice sought the presidency.

Friday’s news prompted an immediate outpouring of support from McCain’s colleagues in Congress.

“Very sad to hear this morning’s update from the family of our dear friend @ SenJohnMcC­ain,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said on Twitter. “We are so fortunate to call him our friend and colleague. John, Cindy, and the entire McCain family are in our prayers at this incredibly difficult hour.”

“John McCain personifie­s service to our country,” House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., said in a tweet. “The whole House is keeping John and his family in our prayers during this time.

McCain has also cultivated a reputation as an independen­t willing to work with Democrats on issues such as immigratio­n and campaign financing. In recent years, he has clashed sharply with President Donald Trump, who said early in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign that McCain was not a war hero.

Following his diagnosis and initial treatment, McCain returned to the Senate and cast a pivotal vote against a Republican bill to undo the Affordable Care Act.

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