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General view at the 2011 Susan G. Komen Global Race for the Cure at National Mall on June 4, 2011 in Washington, DC. Breast Cancer
Friday, Feb. 03, 2012

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Now that the most eminent breast-cancer advocacy group in the nation has apologized for its decision to stop funding Planned Parenthood, it's worth looking at what went wrong. The backlash was not just grassroots and viral but reached the most senior levels. All seven California affiliates of Komen opposed the decision and Dr. Kathy Plesser, a member of Komen's scientific advisory board, threatened to resign if they did not reverse it.

One obvious mistake: they changed their story. The group first issued a statement saying they were defunding Planned Parenthood because it was under investigation, but later Komen CEO and Founder Nancy Brinker went on MSNBC to tell Andrea Mitchell (who herself was recently treated for breast cancer) that it was because Planned Parenthood's mammogram recipients often got lost to care — which would have been a perfectly valid reason were it not obvious that it was a cover up. (Mitchell was thoroughly unconvinced.)

But what is more surprising from a strategic perspective is how much Komen underestimated its own power base. According to John D. Raffaelli, a Komen board member and Washington lobbyist, the organization's leadership had become worried that its ties to Planned Parenthood would alienate pro-choice donors and thought that cutting off the relatively tiny $700,000 grant would be the most politically expedient way to get rid of that potential problem. But in the process, they angered and alienated a much larger and arguably more committed group: the army of breast-cancer survivors and family members who wear pink ribbons and turn out for Race for the Cure and raise money and who have helped turn Komen into the powerhouse that it is. This group not only cuts across political lines, but it has always been vocal, in-your-face and incredibly persistent — sometimes to the point of being annoying. How do you think breast cancer got to be the most visible and well-funded cause out there? And wouldn't the leadership at Susan G. Komen be the people to know this better than anyone else, having harnessed it to great success for the past twenty years?

Now that Komen has alienated its own core supporters, it has a much bigger problem on its hands than a small grant for mammograms given to a women's health organization. (It's also worth noting that the amount of patient services Planned Parenthood devotes to cancer screening and prevention outstrips abortion 5 to 1.) Komen has done a lot of great work, but despite the apology, its future is still in jeopardy, all because they ignored their most important constituents. I don't know how many people there are who have been affected by breast cancer — though I bet Komen does — but take that group and add in pro-choice supporters, and you've no doubt got a much larger contingent than the ardent pro-lifers whose anger Komen had originally feared. Their biggest mistake, it seems, was one of math. Yes, Komen needs a new director of p.r., and possibly even a new CEO, but they also need a new demographer in their research department.

Konigsberg is senior editor at TIME and editor of TIME Ideas. The views expressed are solely her own.

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  • Ruth Davis Konigsberg
  • The most powerful breast cancer advocacy organization in the country forgot about one of its special interest groups: breast cancer survivors and their families
Photo: Riccardo S. Savi / Getty Images