Stem cell bill passes, faces new veto
By DAVID ESPO
AP Special Correspondent
The Democratic-controlled Congress passed legislation Thursday to loosen restraints on federally funded embryonic stem cell research, but the bill's supporters lacked the votes needed to override President Bush's threatened veto.
The 247-176 House vote marked the second time in recent weeks that Democratic leaders have chosen to confront Bush over an issue on which they command widespread public support, following a veto struggle over a proposed troop withdrawal timetable from Iraq.
This time the controversy is at the uneasy intersection of medical research and politics, involving a type of cell that the National Institutes of Health says might serve as "a sort of repair system for the body."
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (news, bio, voting record), D-Calif., appealed to Bush moments before the bill passed to sheath his "cruel veto pen" and sign legislation that she said could help "save lives, find cures, and give hope to those suffering."
But the president responded quickly with a written statement that accused majority Democrats of recycling an old measure that he vetoed a year ago. Under the bill, "American taxpayers would for the first time in our history be compelled to support the deliberate destruction of human embryos. Crossing that line would be a grave mistake," he said in a statement issued in Germany, site of a summit of world leaders.
(Continued here.)
AP Special Correspondent
The Democratic-controlled Congress passed legislation Thursday to loosen restraints on federally funded embryonic stem cell research, but the bill's supporters lacked the votes needed to override President Bush's threatened veto.
The 247-176 House vote marked the second time in recent weeks that Democratic leaders have chosen to confront Bush over an issue on which they command widespread public support, following a veto struggle over a proposed troop withdrawal timetable from Iraq.
This time the controversy is at the uneasy intersection of medical research and politics, involving a type of cell that the National Institutes of Health says might serve as "a sort of repair system for the body."
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (news, bio, voting record), D-Calif., appealed to Bush moments before the bill passed to sheath his "cruel veto pen" and sign legislation that she said could help "save lives, find cures, and give hope to those suffering."
But the president responded quickly with a written statement that accused majority Democrats of recycling an old measure that he vetoed a year ago. Under the bill, "American taxpayers would for the first time in our history be compelled to support the deliberate destruction of human embryos. Crossing that line would be a grave mistake," he said in a statement issued in Germany, site of a summit of world leaders.
(Continued here.)
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