You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Editorial columns

  • Rev the small-business engine
    The United States doesn’t need a new economic engine. It already has one: entrepreneurship. It’s just that we aren’t getting the mileage out of it that we could. Small businesses are instrumental to the U.S. economy.
  • Agenda for a stronger Hoosier economy
    Going into the fall election, Hoosier citizens are, and should be, concerned about jobs. If what we hear on the campaign trail is any indication, many are wondering, “What are my state legislators doing to help?
  • U.S. falls short on debt to military vets
    Here is something worth remembering as we celebrate Memorial Day: The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that every 80 minutes a veteran takes his or her own life.
Advertisement
Associated Press
Karen Handel is jobless in the wake of the decision by the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast-cancer charity to cut off Planned Parenthood.

Worst week in Washington: Karen Handel

A week ago, Karen Handel was the senior vice president for public policy at the Susan G. Komen foundation. It was a great gig for the Washington, D.C., native and 2010 Georgia gubernatorial candidate.

Now she’s unemployed, a casualty of a backlash over Komen’s decision to cut grants to Planned Parenthood.

When Komen announced this month that it would stop giving Planned Parenthood money for breast cancer screening, Handel’s name wasn’t mentioned, but she was quickly pinpointed by Planned Parenthood supporters as a likely culprit.

The former Georgia secretary of state is an outspoken opponent of abortion rights; during her campaign for governor, she pledged to defund the family-planning organization.

In resigning Tuesday, Handel acknowledged advocating that Komen cut Planned Parenthood off but said she was hardly the sole force behind the policy change. Still, she is the only Komen executive to step down.

And judging by her resignation letter – in which she mentions a proposed severance package and says, “I respectfully decline” – it was not an entirely amicable departure.

While she may have a bright future in conservative advocacy or punditry, Handel will probably struggle to find employment at another nonpartisan outfit – especially one with Komen’s wide influence.

Komen, meanwhile, reversed its decision and reinstated the grants.

Karen Handel, for losing your job by taking the losing side in a major controversy, you had the worst week in Washington. Congrats, or something.

Rachel Weiner is a Washington Post political reporter.