Gold9472
04-11-2007, 11:07 AM
US Senate to brave new Bush veto of stem-cell bill
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/US_Senate_to_brave_new_Bush_veto_of_04102007.html
Published: Tuesday April 10, 2007
The Democratic-controlled Senate is ready to approve US funding for hotly contested embryonic stem-cell research this week -- and hand President George W. Bush a new opportunity to veto the bill.
The Senate is likely to vote on a bill the House of Representatives approved in January, lifting a restriction on using federal funds for stem-cell research on human embryos, which may hold the keys to medical advances in treating degenerative diseases.
A similar text was passed last year in Congress, while it was still controlled by Bush's Republicans.
It prompted the first veto of his presidency, in the name of protecting human life which begins, he says, at the moment of conception.
History seems ready to repeat itself in the coming weeks or months, but with a twist: the majority favoring federal funding for the research grew among moderates during last year's congressional campaign debates, placing more pressure on Bush.
This new political test of wills between Congress and the White House could prove even messier than the loggerheads over the war in Iraq.
A presidential veto already awaits bills, passed but not reconciled by each house, conditioning emergency funding for the war in Iraq on setting of a schedule for the withdrawal of US troops.
While a less passionate issue, the stem-cell debate puts Bush at odds with many leaders of his own party, but more in tune with his conservative evangelical Christian political "base," as he calls it.
Tony Fratto, a Bush spokesman, said in January there is no sign Bush will budge.
"The president will certainly veto the legislation if it comes to his desk because it would compel all American taxpayers to pay for research that relies on the intentional destruction of human embryos for the derivation of stem cells."
Researchers working under the federal restrictions may use only those cell lines available prior to the 2001 ban, and have their qualms about those.
"American science would be better served and the nation would be better served if we let our scientists have access to more cell lines," the director of the US National Institutes of Health, (NIH), Elias Zerhouni, said in Senate testimony.
"These cell lines have exhibited instability from the genetic standpoint," he said.
"It's not possible for me to see how we can continue the momentum of science in stem-cell research with the cell lines that we have currently at NIH that can be funded," he said.
Despite the weight of the scientific argument, there is no assurance that the upcoming Senate vote will pave the way toward changing federal law; the House of Representatives has not been able to raise the two-thirds vote needed to override a presidential veto.
The 20-hour Senate debate opens Tuesday.
That will also grant an opportunity to examine a compromise text sponsored by two Republicans, which would encourage stem-cell research on "embryos that have naturally lost the ability to develop into fetuses, such as those that have died 'naturally' during fertility treatments."
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/US_Senate_to_brave_new_Bush_veto_of_04102007.html
Published: Tuesday April 10, 2007
The Democratic-controlled Senate is ready to approve US funding for hotly contested embryonic stem-cell research this week -- and hand President George W. Bush a new opportunity to veto the bill.
The Senate is likely to vote on a bill the House of Representatives approved in January, lifting a restriction on using federal funds for stem-cell research on human embryos, which may hold the keys to medical advances in treating degenerative diseases.
A similar text was passed last year in Congress, while it was still controlled by Bush's Republicans.
It prompted the first veto of his presidency, in the name of protecting human life which begins, he says, at the moment of conception.
History seems ready to repeat itself in the coming weeks or months, but with a twist: the majority favoring federal funding for the research grew among moderates during last year's congressional campaign debates, placing more pressure on Bush.
This new political test of wills between Congress and the White House could prove even messier than the loggerheads over the war in Iraq.
A presidential veto already awaits bills, passed but not reconciled by each house, conditioning emergency funding for the war in Iraq on setting of a schedule for the withdrawal of US troops.
While a less passionate issue, the stem-cell debate puts Bush at odds with many leaders of his own party, but more in tune with his conservative evangelical Christian political "base," as he calls it.
Tony Fratto, a Bush spokesman, said in January there is no sign Bush will budge.
"The president will certainly veto the legislation if it comes to his desk because it would compel all American taxpayers to pay for research that relies on the intentional destruction of human embryos for the derivation of stem cells."
Researchers working under the federal restrictions may use only those cell lines available prior to the 2001 ban, and have their qualms about those.
"American science would be better served and the nation would be better served if we let our scientists have access to more cell lines," the director of the US National Institutes of Health, (NIH), Elias Zerhouni, said in Senate testimony.
"These cell lines have exhibited instability from the genetic standpoint," he said.
"It's not possible for me to see how we can continue the momentum of science in stem-cell research with the cell lines that we have currently at NIH that can be funded," he said.
Despite the weight of the scientific argument, there is no assurance that the upcoming Senate vote will pave the way toward changing federal law; the House of Representatives has not been able to raise the two-thirds vote needed to override a presidential veto.
The 20-hour Senate debate opens Tuesday.
That will also grant an opportunity to examine a compromise text sponsored by two Republicans, which would encourage stem-cell research on "embryos that have naturally lost the ability to develop into fetuses, such as those that have died 'naturally' during fertility treatments."