Former Congresswoman Mia Love’s heartbreaking last words to America as she ‘lives out final days’

An ex-Congresswoman has shared an emotional open letter to America while dying of brain cancer.

Former Utah representative Mia Love, the first black Republican woman elected to Congress, was diagnosed with glioblastoma, an aggressive brain tumor, in 2022.

The former politician shared her diagnosis publicly in May 2024 with CNN’s Jake Tapper.

Mormon mother-of-three Love, 49, announced that she was living out her final days as she penned an open letter to her country in Deseret News on Tuesday.

‘I am taking up my pen, not to say goodbye but to say thank you and express my living wish for you and the America I know,’ Love started the letter.

Her letter details her latest health updates, noting that she has shifted her focus from trying to combat the cancer to ‘enjoying every moment and making memories with the time we have’.

‘My life has been extended by exceptional medical care, science and extraordinary professionals who have become dear friends,’ the former politician wrote.

‘My extra season of life has also been the result of the faith and prayers of countless friends, known and unknown.’

Former Utah Congresswoman Mia Love has shared an emotional open letter to America while dying of brain cancer

Former Utah Congresswoman Mia Love has shared an emotional open letter to America while dying of brain cancer

Mother-of-three Love, 49, (pictured with her family) announced that she was living out her final days as she penned an open letter to her country in Desert News on Tuesday

Mother-of-three Love, 49, (pictured with her family) announced that she was living out her final days as she penned an open letter to her country in Desert News on Tuesday

Love went on to detail her perspective of America as the daughter of Haitian immigrants who came to the land of the free with barely a dime in their pockets.

‘My parents immigrated to the United States with $10 in their pocket and a belief that the America they had heard about really did exist as the land of opportunity,’ she wrote.

‘Through hard work and great sacrifice they achieved success — so the America I came to know growing up was filled with all the excitement found in living the American dream.

‘I was taught to love this country, warts and all, and understand I had a role to play in our nation’s future. I learned to passionately believe in the possibilities and promise of America.’

Love hailed America as the land of the free, adding: ‘What makes America great is the idea that when government is limited and decisions are made closest to the people they impact, people are free — free to work, free to live, free to choose, free to fail and free to achieve.

‘The America I know provides everyone an equal opportunity to be as unequaled as they choose to be.’

Love urged Americans to ‘simply remember that this country is exceptional’.

‘I can see on the horizon that our best and brightest days as a nation are still to come,’ she wrote.

Love was pictured hugging her father, Jean Maxime Bourdeau, after she won her House seat in 2014

Love was pictured hugging her father, Jean Maxime Bourdeau, after she won her House seat in 2014

Mother-of-three Love, 49, (pictured with her family) announced that she was living out her final days as she penned an open letter to her country in Desert News on Tuesday

Mother-of-three Love, 49, (pictured with her family) announced that she was living out her final days as she penned an open letter to her country in Desert News on Tuesday

Pictured: Love, when she was Saratoga Springs Mayor, arriving to address delegates during the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, August 28, 2012

Pictured: Love, when she was Saratoga Springs Mayor, arriving to address delegates during the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, August 28, 2012

The former politician wrapped her letter up by inviting people to connect with her on social media, where she said she would be posting additional thoughts and quotes from her 2023 memoir, Qualified.

She also worked as a political commentator, as a frequent contributor for CNN and a rotating guest on The View.

The former congresswoman is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, also known as the Mormon religion.

‘You’ve got this perfect life, perfect time, and then one day – it’s not perfect,’ Love recalled when revealing her diagnosis to CNN’s Jake Tapper last spring.

Love told Tapper that although she knew something was wrong, she didn’t think the headaches she was having were serious.

It wasn’t until she was on a family vacation in Puerto Rico that the headaches became unbearable, and her husband Jason rushed her to a hospital.

Mia is married to Jason Love, and the couple share three children together

Mia is married to Jason Love, and the couple share three children together

Mia Love, 49, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer in 2022

Mia Love, 49, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer in 2022

A CAT Scan then revealed a tumor in her brain. She was able to have 85 percent of it removed, but a biopsy showed that the tumor was cancerous.

Doctors told her at the time that she only had 10-15 months to live. Love has long outlived the initial prognosis.

‘I was devastated. I actually had a doctor look at me and say, “You’re going to die from this. It’s inevitable.”‘

Love said that she accepted the cancer diagnosis but wouldn’t accept the dire prognosis.

She participated in a clinical trial at Duke University focusing on immunotherapy, which boosts the body’s immune system to destroy cancer cells.

Love previously revealed that the immunotherapy was working to reduce her tumor. She also underwent chemotherapy and radiation.

Mia Love’s letter in full

Source: Deseret News

My dear friends, fellow Americans and Utahns. I am taking up my pen, not to say goodbye but to say thank you and express my living wish for you and the America I know.

My battle with brain cancer is coming to an end. The disease is no longer responding to treatment and my family and I have shifted our focus from treatments, to enjoying every moment and making memories with the time we have. My life has been extended by exceptional medical care, science and extraordinary professionals who have become dear friends. My extra season of life has also been the result of the faith and prayers of countless friends, known and unknown. The result of such humble faith and pleading prayers have been felt by me and my family in ways too numerous to count. I have always believed that faith and science are inextricably interconnected.

As a mayor, member of congress and media commentator I have seen the worst of petty politics, divisive rhetoric and disappointing lapses of moral character by some. These same roles also provided me a front row seat and backstage pass to be blessed and inspired by the courage, vision and hope of America’s finest daughters, sons and citizens.

Couching this column as a ‘dying wish’ felt a little dramatic, even for a drama person like me. We are not certain how long this season of my battle will be and I do want to share, and reshare, some things with the world that I passionately believe. I write all of this as my ‘living wish’ and hopefully ‘enduring wish’ for you.

Let me tell you about the America I know. My parents immigrated to the United States with $10 in their pocket and a belief that the America they had heard about really did exist as the land of opportunity. Through hard work and great sacrifice they achieved success — so the America I came to know growing up was filled with all the excitement found in living the American dream. I was taught to love this country, warts and all, and understand I had a role to play in our nation’s future. I learned to passionately believe in the possibilities and promise of America.

Watching my father and mother work odd jobs in order to provide for us and maintain their independence taught me valuable lessons in personal responsibility. When tough times came they didn’t look to Washington, they looked within. Because the America they knew was centered in self-reliance, the America I know is founded in the freedom self-reliance always brings.

What makes America great is the idea that when government is limited and decisions are made closest to the people they impact, people are free — free to work, free to live, free to choose, free to fail and free to achieve. The America I know provides everyone an equal opportunity to be as unequaled as they choose to be.

The America I know gives back. Americans, regardless of financial status, are the most giving people on the planet. On their own, without government requirement, our people give their money, their time and their attention to causes, communities and people in need whether it is across the street or around the world. I’ve experienced this generosity throughout my life and during my battle with cancer. I am so grateful.

The America I know makes tough choices. As the mayor of Saratoga Springs, Utah, facing its own fiscal cliff, we put limited government, fiscal discipline and personal responsibility first in order to create an amazing community that could last. I have also seen that facing challenging choices head-on inspires our citizens to get involved, engage in meaningful dialogue, rally around shared values, do things differently and change the way government works.

Regardless of the difficulties we may face individually, in our families, in our communities and in our nation, the old adage is still true — you can make excuses or you can make progress, but you cannot make both! The America I know doesn’t make excuses.

The America I know is grounded in the gritty determination found in patriots, pioneers and struggling parents, in small business owners with big ideas, in the farmers who work in the beauty of our landscapes and the artists who paint them, in our heroic military and our inspiring Olympic athletes, and in every child who looks at the seemingly impossible and says, ‘I can do that.’

The America I know is great — not because government made it great but because ordinary citizens like me, like my parents and like you are given the opportunity every day to do extraordinary things. That is the America I know!

What the America I know deserves:

Some have forgotten the math of America — whenever you divide you diminish. What I know is that the goodness and compassion of the American people is a multiplier that simply cannot be measured. The goodness and greatness of our country is multiplied when neighbors help neighbors, when we reach out to those in need and build better citizens and more heroic communities.

You see, the America I know is built by citizens and leaders who respect, strengthen and serve each other not based on race, gender or economic status but because we are Americans! We all have a role to play in uniting the country around the principles that have made us extraordinary.

The America I know will continue as long as each of us simply remember that this country is exceptional — because it is! I know it is! I can see on the horizon that our best and brightest days as a nation are still to come.

The America I know deserves leaders who trust the people and will tell them the hard truth about where we are and what we need to do in order to preserve our future. We need leaders who are prepared to engage in a dialogue about realities, priorities and solving America’s problems.

When I wrote my memoir, Qualified, the working title was ‘By the Content of Your Character.’ The American principles I wrote about in my book, are the principles that shaped and blessed my life. I have always felt that it was character that counts in this country. The America I know, while far from perfect, is the place where we strive every day to live up to the principles Dr. Martin Luther King declared from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. We will be judged in the end, individually and as a nation, by the content of our character.

Preserving the America We know:

The America I know isn’t just my story and it isn’t just your story. It is our story. It is a story of endless possibilities, human struggle, standing up and striving for more. Our story has been told for well over 200 years, punctuated by small steps and giant leaps; from a woman on a bus to a man with a dream; from the bravery of the greatest generation to the explorers, entrepreneurs, reformers and innovators of today. This is our story. This is the America we know — because we built it — together.

As my season of life begins to draw to a close, I still passionately believe that we can revive the American story we know and love. I am convinced that our citizens must remember the principles of our story so that our children, and those seeking freedom around the world, will know where to look to find a place for their story.

We must fight to keep the America we know as that shining city on a hill — truly the last best hope on earth. Like Benjamin Franklin and countless patriots down through the ages, I believe the American experiment is not a setting sun but a rising sun.

I thank each of you, and all of you, for being part of my journey in the American dream. You and I, we the people, will be forever connected in the cause of this country we love.

I want to invite you to join me in the last leg of the journey. On my social media pages (Instagram and Facebook) I will be sharing thoughts, excerpts from my book Qualified, photos and memories. These pages will be a celebration of the people who have blessed and inspired me and the principles I have tried to live and lead by. Like my very first political campaign, I will be running to the very end and hope you will run this leg with me and my family.

In the end, I hope that my life will have mattered and made a difference for the nation I love and the family and friends I adore. I hope you will see the America I know in the years ahead, that you will hear my words in the whisper of the wind of freedom and feel my presence in the flame of the enduring principles of liberty.

My living wish and fervent prayer for you and for this nation is that the America I have known, is the America you fight to preserve and that each citizen, and every leader, will do their part to ensure that the America we know will be the America our grandchildren and great grandchildren will inherit.

Mia

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