Susan B. Anthony List has mostly given up on supporting female candidates, choosing to focus more on tight battleground House and Senate races and the 2012 presidential match up. That many of those campaigns seem to involve male anti-choice candidates trying to beat or unseat female pro-choice legislators is no doubt just an unfortunate coincidence.
But it's not just the misuse of the famous feminist's name to push a remarkably anti-women agenda that has historian Deborah Hughes upset. As the President and CEO of the National Susan B. Anthony Museum and House, Hughes is just as bothered by the group's claim that Anthony would identify as "pro-life."