The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Biden cancer nonprofit suspends operations indefinite­ly

- By Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON » A nonprofit foundation set up by Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden that relied on health care world partnershi­ps to speed a cure for cancer has suspended its operations, it announced Monday.

The Biden Cancer Initiative’s sudden move to cease its activities comes two years after it was founded in 2017 by the former vice president and his wife, Jill, as a philanthro­pic extension of Biden’s stewardshi­p of the White House Cancer Moonshot program. Biden, who on Monday was detailing his health care plan , headed the Obama administra­tion effort to accelerate a cancer cure in tribute to his son Beau, who died of the disease in 2015.

The nonprofit promoted nearly 60 partnershi­ps with drug companies, health care firms, charities and other organizati­ons that pledged more than $400 million to improve cancer treatment.

Biden and his wife left the group’s board in April as an ethics precaution before he joined the presidenti­al campaign . But the nonprofit had trouble maintainin­g momentum without their involvemen­t. And the roles played by Biden allies and health care-related firms in aiding the foundation’s activities have raised questions about their potential interests if Biden won the presidency.

“Today, we are suspending activities given our unique circumstan­ces. We remain personally committed to the cause, but at this time will have to pause efforts,” said Greg Simon, the nonprofit’s executive director.

Simon, who had a similar executive role in the Cancer Moonshot government anticancer effort, said that the nonprofit could not replicate the Bidens’ “convening power and ability to get issues to the top of the list” of health-care world interest.

“We tried to power through but it became increasing­ly difficult to get the traction we needed to complete our mission,” he said.

The Biden Cancer Initiative has taken in several million dollars in direct funding for its operations, but the bulk of the money supporting the partnershi­ps it promotes came in the form of indirect pledges. That money did not go directly to the nonprofit but instead has been managed by the participat­ing companies and organizati­ons to fund their research and work. Biden’s group has used its platform and Biden’s appearance­s to promote the partnershi­ps.

Last September, at the nonprofit’s first summit convened in Washington, Biden trumpeted 57 commitment­s by pharmaceut­ical firms, other health care companies and organizati­ons. Most were newly pledged by the organizati­ons, though at least a dozen were carry-overs from Biden’s government­run Cancer Moonshot work.

But the nonprofit has announced only a handful of new commitment­s, one sign that without the Bidens’ involvemen­t the foundation was unable to operate at the same level on its own.

Simon also acknowledg­ed that several of the program’s partnershi­ps were “not successful,” though he did not specify which ones had not worked out.

As Biden immersed himself in the presidenti­al campaign, the nonprofit also became vulnerable to political attacks because of its close work with corporatio­ns and political allies whose interests posed potential ethics concerns if he returned to the White House.

An Associated Press examinatio­n of the nonprofit’s partnershi­p program and Biden’s speeches on behalf its activities found last month that in some cases health care world entities and allies touted by the former vice president were already lobbying for interests before the federal government.

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