Joe Biden’s Heartbreaking Medical Update

Dr. Jill Biden revealed on June 2, 2026, that her husband, former President Joe Biden, is living with stage four prostate cancer that has metastasized to his bones and will remain with him for the rest of his life, describing his condition as “hard” but noting he continues to maintain an active schedule.

The former first lady, 74, made the remarks during an appearance on “The View” to promote her new memoir, “View from the East Wing,” one day after discussing her husband’s health on the “Today” show on June 1, 2026.

President Joe Biden, 83, was diagnosed in May 2025 after reporting urinary symptoms to his doctors. His office disclosed at the time that the cancer had already metastasized. He completed a round of radiation therapy after the diagnosis was made public.

When co-host Ana Navarro pressed her about her husband’s condition, Jill Biden described a daily life that is diminished but not stilled.

“He’s doing OK,” she said. “As probably everyone in this audience knows — because I’m sure you’ve all been touched by cancer — it’s hard, it’s hard. It’s stage four, it’s in his bones, but he’s keeping up his schedule, he’s going to D.C. on Amtrak a couple of times a month, he’s speaking at Democratic rallies, he’s writing, so he’s active, he’s Joe.”

The cancer is among the most aggressive forms of the disease. Dr. Matthew Smith of Massachusetts General Brigham Cancer Center has said patients with metastatic prostate cancer typically live four to five years.

During her appearance on the “Today” show on June 1, 2026, Jill Biden told Craig Melvin that the metastasis fundamentally altered the prognosis.

“Craig, you’ve been through this with your brother; you know how tough it is,” she said. “And I think if he had just been diagnosed with prostate cancer, that’s one thing, because that can be cured. But the fact that it metastasized to his bones, that makes it a whole different story.”

She also offered a pointed explanation for how a sitting president, with access to the best medical care in the world, could have a cancer progress undetected. The Bidens’ physicians, she said, followed American Urology Association guidelines that recommend against routine prostate-specific antigen screening for men older than 70. No PSA test was done.

Revisiting the June 2024 Debate

The interviews also returned Jill Biden to the most consequential night of her husband’s political career: the June 27, 2024, debate against then-candidate Donald Trump, whose halting performance accelerated calls within the Democratic Party for President Joe Biden to abandon his reelection bid. He initially intended to run for a second term but withdrew in July 2024. Vice President Kamala Harris secured the Democratic nomination and lost to Trump that November.

Jill Biden told Melvin she had received no warnings from her husband’s medical team before that night.

“No one ever came to me and said, ‘Jill, Joe’s aging,’ or, ‘Something’s wrong,'” she said. “When all Americans saw that moment on TV at the debate, I mean, I was out of my mind, because I thought, ‘Oh my god, he’s having a stroke.'”

According to passages from her memoir, she wrote that watching her husband onstage felt like watching “an AI hologram of the man we knew, and the hologram was glitching,” and wondered whether he had been drugged. She recounted that when the couple walked offstage, Joe Biden turned to her and said, “I really messed up, didn’t I?” She replied, “Yeah, Joe, you did.” The campaign held three more events that night, with the president delivering speeches at each.

Defending the Decision to Stay In

Asked why she did not press her husband to step aside sooner, Jill Biden told Melvin it had to be his decision. She pushed back on critics — including actor George Clooney and former special counsel Robert Hur — who had publicly questioned the president’s fitness for office, saying her husband had aged the way anyone in his 80s ages.

“He aged. He did. He got older, and we all saw him aging,” she said. “There were the words that he would forget. But we were all aging.”

Whether she still believed her husband could have served four more years, however, she conceded the answer had changed.

“Well, not from what I know now,” she said. “I mean, my God, who knew? I mean, it was so shocking to get that cancer diagnosis. I was looking through travel magazines, like, ‘Oh, where are we going to go? What are we going to do?’ And then we get this cancer diagnosis, and I think, ‘What am I doing? Our whole life is changed now.'”

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