The story behind the coin
Roughly one in eight American women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime. In the 2010s Congress decided to put that fight on a coin — and the road to doing it turned out to be surprisingly hard.
Representatives Carolyn Maloney of New York and Pete Sessions of Texas introduced the Breast Cancer Awareness Commemorative Coin Act on June 10, 2015. The House passed it on July 15, 2015, the Senate followed on April 19, 2016, and President Obama signed it into law on April 29, 2016 (Public Law 114-148). It authorized a three-coin program: a $5 gold piece, a silver dollar, and the clad half dollar described here.
But the bill stalled along the way. As originally written, the surcharge — the extra dollars added to each coin's price and routed to charity — was to be split between two groups: the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and Susan G. Komen. A faction of House Republicans objected to sending federal coin proceeds to Komen because of Komen's grants to Planned Parenthood, and the vote was pulled. The compromise that finally passed dropped Komen entirely. All net surcharges from the program — $5 from every half dollar, plus $10 per silver dollar and $35 per gold coin — were directed to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation in New York. That is the whole reason the coin sold above face value: you weren't buying fifty cents of metal, you were buying a donation with a coin attached.