Next week on General Hospital (March 2–6, 2026), Port Charles becomes a battlefield where ambition, obsession, and espionage collide — and no one walks away untouched.
Willow should be focused solely on her congressional nomination. Power is finally within reach. She’s refining speeches, courting donors, and shaping herself into a national force poised to rise beyond Port Charles. But the higher she climbs, the more fragile her foundation becomes. Behind closed doors lies the secret that could destroy everything: Drew.
Convinced she is “protecting” him, Willow continues to monitor his medication with chilling precision. She times every dose, controls his isolation, and justifies the sedation as mercy. In her mind, containment equals stability. But as public scrutiny intensifies around her campaign, cracks begin to show. Staffers ask questions. Security tightens. Her schedule grows impossible to manage. Every hour spent chasing votes is an hour she cannot personally supervise Drew.
When Nina suggests placing Drew in a professional facility, the advice is practical — and terrifying. Institutional care would mean oversight. Documentation. Witnesses. Most of all, it would mean surrendering control. Willow refuses, not out of compassion, but fear. If Drew leaves her house, he might remember. He might speak.
Enter Kai.
Loyal and persistent, Kai insists on seeing Drew for himself. During the visit, he notices the sluggish movements, the fog in Drew’s eyes, the unnatural pauses between thoughts. Something feels wrong. In a fleeting moment of clarity, Drew attempts to communicate — a look held too long, a subtle resistance to the next pill. It’s enough. Kai begins digging.
As he consults medical professionals and quietly reviews prescription patterns, disturbing inconsistencies emerge. The woman celebrated as a reform-minded rising star may be orchestrating calculated control behind closed doors. If the truth surfaces, the fallout won’t just be personal — it will be political annihilation.
Meanwhile, another storm gathers.
Leisel is determined to reunite Maxie and Nathan, seeing Lulu and Spinelli as obstacles to be dismantled. She pressures her daughter, Britt Westbourne, to subtly manipulate events — strategic dinners, whispered reminders of shared history, carefully timed misunderstandings. But Britt’s attention is elsewhere.
She’s terrified for Jason.
As danger swirls around a mysterious medication tied to Windermere, Lucas makes a reckless decision: infiltrate the estate and steal a dose to reverse-engineer its formula. The plan is bold — and potentially fatal. Security is tight. The forces behind the drug are ruthless. If Lucas is caught, retaliation could be swift and permanent.

Suddenly, whispers spread that Britt herself may be in danger. Conversations stop when she enters rooms. Messages go unanswered. The threat shifts from romantic meddling to survival. Jason grows more protective, allies consider drastic measures, and discussions of relocation surface. In trying to shield Britt, her friends risk igniting an even bigger conflict.
And then there’s Josslyn.
What began as calculated involvement with the WSB spirals toward lethal exposure. If Colton uncovers her true allegiance, everything collapses. He already suspects her composure is too controlled, her instincts too sharp. As he digs deeper — tracing coded calls and unexplained meetings — the possibility becomes chillingly real: Josslyn knows too much about his connection to Faison’s final operation.
In this world, knowledge isn’t power. It’s a death sentence.
Colton’s charm turns cold. His questions sharpen. Josslyn attempts subtle adjustments to deflect suspicion, but the shift only confirms his doubts. If he decides to act, it won’t be impulsive. It will be surgical — an accident, a failed mission, a disappearance without fingerprints.
By week’s end, Willow’s empire teeters, Britt stands in the crosshairs, and Josslyn edges toward a confrontation that could explode every alliance in Port Charles.
The game is no longer about survival.
It’s about who strikes first.