GOP leader Steve Scalise gives update on cancer treatment, reveals wife knew something was wrong over phone

House Republican Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., returned to the Capitol on Thursday for the first time since his cancer diagnosis and said his treatments are "going well." 

Scalise, who was diagnosed with blood cancer three weeks ago, told reporters he has begun chemotherapy and said his doctor is "encouraged" by his progress and cleared his return to work.

"Obviously a few weeks ago I got diagnosed with cancer. As you can see, my protocols are going to be a little different for the next few months because cancer, one of the many things that does is it attacks your immune system," Scalise said as he explained why he was wearing a face mask and had asked reporters to interview him from a distance. 

"I am probably about three weeks into a treatment on chemotherapy. So we're making sure that I'm working with my doctors, my doctor Shirley signed off and be coming back today," he added. 

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Scalise said he had a call Wednesday with all the House Republican committee chairs and was keeping up to date on the activities of the House as he focused on his health. 

"It's going well, we have a great team. We're focused on the treatments, they're going to continue to evaluate me," Scalise said. "It's kind of a few months process. They don't yet know how long it's going to be, four months, six months, but they want to continue to evaluate." 

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"I thank everybody for the prayers because the prayers are giving me strength. And my colleagues even give me incredible strength and every step of the way," he said.

Scalise was hospitalized in June 2017 after a gunman opened fire as Republicans were practicing for that year's congressional baseball game. He was one of five people shot. The injury put Scalise in critical condition, and he did not return to the House floor until September of that year.

Last month, Scalise announced that he had been diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma, a treatable blood cancer. His condition prompted an outpouring of well-wishes from his colleagues and supporters, including House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who called him a "faith-filled fighter" and wished him a speedy recovery. 

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Scalise said Thursday that advances in medicine will allow him to undergo outpatient treatment with chemotherapy, even from his own office at the Capitol. He also shared how his wife was the first person to notice something was wrong when he took ill in August.

"I was on the road during August recess, you're on the road a lot. And it was really my wife who noticed I was – my appetite was dropping. I was doing a bunch of political events. And you know, I need a lunch and wasn't even hungry for dinner. It was just kind of that feeling myself. And she's on the phone with me, and she's saying, Steve, this doesn't sound right. When you come home, we're getting some, we're getting some tests run," he recounted.

After a hospital visit and some tests, doctors confirmed that Scalise's wife was right and that he had Myeloma. 

"She was very stern, and she knew she could tell me better than me and, you know, sometimes you don't listen to your body," he shared in good humor. 

Fox News' Elizabeth Elkind and Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.

Bill Maher announces his show is coming back amidst writers strike: 'Time to bring people back to work'

Bill Maher announced that his HBO show will soon return without writers.

"Real Time with Bill Maher's" 21st season was cut short after Hollywood writers went on strike last May. Writers are asking for higher pay, a guaranteed number of writers per room, better residuals and safeguards around the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the writing process, in their list of demands.

With no end to the strike in sight, Maher revealed that the show would return without writers or writing.

"Real Time is coming back, unfortunately, sans writers or writing. It has been five months, and it is time to bring people back to work," he wrote Wednesday on X, formerly known as Twitter. 

The liberal comedian said that while he "sympathized" with the writers' concerns, there were other staff who were being hurt financially by the strike. 

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"The writers have important issues that I sympathize with, and hope they are addressed to their satisfaction, but they are not the only people with issues, problems, and concerns. Despite some assistance from me, much of the staff is struggling mightily," he wrote.

Maher reiterated how he loves his fellow writers on "Real Time," but he would not allow the show "to lose an entire year and see so many below-the-line people suffer so much." The HBO host pledged to "honor the spirit of the strike" by abstaining from show elements that were dependent on writing, such as the monologue, desk piece, and "New Rules" segments.

He admitted "Real Time" would not be as good without writers, but also promised it would not "disappoint" fans.

"But the heart of the show is an off-the-cuff panel discussion that aims to cut through the bulls–t and predictable partisanship, and that will continue. The show will not disappoint," he insisted.

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Maher's announcement drew a mixed reaction online, with many liberals attacking the HBO host as a "scab," someone who crosses a picket line. 

"Without writers, the new weekly SCAB edition of "Real Time With Bill Maher will be 83 seconds long," Keith Olbermann mocked.

The former MSNBC host did not mince words in his rebuke of Maher. "As somebody who's known you since 1978: F—k you , Bill, you selfish and unfunny scumbag," he wrote on X.

The Writers Guild of America, the union representing the striking writers, blasted Maher's move on social media.

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"Bill Maher’s decision to go back on the air while his Guild is on strike is disappointing. If he goes forward with his plan, he needs to honor more than ‘the spirit of the strike,'" the group wrote on X. The WGA warned Maher he was "obligated to follow the strike rules and not perform any writing services" as a WGA member, and said they would be picketing his show in protest.

Actresses like Jennifer Aniston also faced backlash this week for "liking" a Drew Barrymore Instagram post explaining why she also made the decision to bring back her show, amid the strike.

Maher is the first late-night host to resume programming during the writers strike. He previously zinged his late-night competitors on NBC, CBS and ABC, saying he didn't understand why their shows have survived during the modern era of streaming options.

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He also mocked hosts like Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert for pandering to liberal fans. 

"Those guys don't have takes. I have takes," he said. "What they do is say exactly what a liberal audience wants them to say about that. That's not a take," he argued on his "Club Random" podcast.

"Real Time with Bill Maher" will be back with an original episode on September 22, Deadline reported.

Warner Bros. Discovery did not immediately return a request for comment.

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