
“The science has overtaken the politics,” Karl Zinsmeister, the chief domestic policy adviser to President Bush, said in an interview yesterday. “If you set reasonable parameters and offer a lot of encouragement and public funding, science will solve this dilemma, and you don’t have to have a culture war about this.”
At the NY Times, Stohlberg has this additional quote promoting Bush as the biomedical Atticus Finch:
“This is very much in accord with the president’s vision from the get-go,” said Karl Zinsmeister, a domestic policy adviser to Mr. Bush who kept the president apprised of the work. “I don’t think there’s any doubt that the president’s drawing of lines on cloning and embryo use was a positive factor in making this come to fruition.”
Yet no less than James Thomson offers the WPost a different take on Bush as the stern ethical decider who pushed scientists to do better. “My feeling is that the political controversy set the field back four or five years.”
—->In the same article, advocates for expanded funding present the first signs of their emerging counter-argument in support of staying on course with multiple paths of research:
“I don’t think this changes the debate,” said Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), a key participant in the House debate. “We still need to encourage all types of research, and we need to put ethical oversight in place.”
“While this is exciting basic research, it could still take years to get this to work in humans in a way that could be used clinically,” said Robert Lanza, chief scientific officer of Advanced Cell Technology in Worcester, Mass. “I cannot overstate that this is early-stage research and that we should not abandon other areas of stem cell research.”
—->The Bush White House is not the only actor claiming political credit. Mitt Romney is arguing that he is one of the few political leaders to take a consistent principled position on the balance between promise and ethics, incorporating advocacy for cell reprogramming research into his campaign platform:
Mitt Romney’s campaign is seeking to capitalize on today’s announcement that scientists have created stem cells without having to make or destroy embryos. The campaign points out that Romney has long called for a less ethically- and morally-charged alternative and highlighted an op-ed piece published today on National Review Online that praises him as the only presidential candidate who has embraced an unambiguous and principled stance on the alternatives, incorporating them into his proposed domestic policy. Romney’s campaign also circulated an op-ed piece published in June, in which Romney called on Congress to support such research into alternatives.