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FROM: Stateline.org
Thursday, April 05, 2007

More govs boost stem cell research
By Christine Vestal, Stateline.org Staff Writer  

As Congress and the Bush administration remain deadlocked over 
funding for stem cell research, three new Democratic governors have 
joined other state leaders in supporting the controversial science.
Last week, New York’s Eliot Spitzer won legislative approval for $600 
million for stem cell research and Deval Patrick of Massachusetts 
began trying to undo a state regulation that hinders the research 
there. Iowa Gov. Chet Culver signed a law in February repealing that 
state’s ban on the nascent science.
All three – newcomers to the governor’s mansion -- pledged to support 
stem cell research in their election campaigns. They join a half-
dozen other governors from both parties – including California Gov. 
Arnold Schwarzenegger (R), Connecticut Gov. Jodi Rell (R), Maryland 
Gov. Martin O’Malley (D), Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D), 
Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle (D) and New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine (D) -- 
who have backed the research for its promised medical breakthroughs 
and potential economic rewards.

Since August 9, 2001, when President George W. Bush curtailed federal 
funding of stem cell research, states have stepped in to keep the 
fledgling science afloat by providing state money and removing legal 
barriers to its practice. 

Last July, Bush exercised his first presidential veto by refusing to 
sign a bill that would have expanded federal funding for the science. 
This year, the new Democratic-led U.S. House passed the same bill – 
releasing money for stem cell research using surplus embryos from in 
vitro fertilization clinics – and the U.S. Senate is expected to 
approve the same bill. But political analysts say Congress is not 
likely to muster enough votes to override a promised presidential 
veto.

Although a recent ABC survey showed the American public favors 
government funding of stem cell studies by a margin of two to one, 
Bush and his anti-abortion allies remain opposed because they say it 
violates the sanctity of human life by destroying embryos. 

Democrats are united in supporting the science, along with such high-
profile Republicans as Nancy Reagan, whose loved ones have had 
Alzheimers’ and other diseases that might be ameliorated by the 
research.

New York’s new budget measure will make the Empire State the sixth 
state – California, New Jersey, Illinois, Connecticut and Maryland 
are the others -- to finance stem cell research. It would create the 
second largest state research fund in the country - $600 million over 
11 years. California’s grant program is the largest, setting aside $3 
billion over 10 years to support the research. 

Wisconsin -- where the research was developed -- does not provide 
state grants, but Doyle has set secured and private money to build a 
research institute where stem cell studies may be conducted. 

Both Spitzer and his predecessor, Republican Gov. George Pataki, 
pushed lawmakers to approve stem cell funding in part to attract 
investment to the state’s economically depressed upstate region, home 
to stem cell leaders Cornell University, University of Rochester and 
other medical research centers.

Patrick’s proposed change to public health rules would lift a barrier 
to the research created by his Republican predecessor, presidential 
hopeful Mitt Romney, an opponent of stem cell research. 

In 2005, the Massachusetts legislature overrode Romney’s veto and 
repealed a previous law requiring local district attorneys to approve 
all scientific research involving human embryos. The new law set up 
ethical guidelines and granted blanket approval to studies involving 
surplus human embryos from in vitro fertilization clinics. Romney 
subsequently moved administratively to block the research.

At Patrick’s request, the Massachusetts Dept. of Health and Human 
Services is expected to nullify Romney’s action. In February, Culver 
signed a law repealing a 2002 stem cell research ban. Iowa’s new law 
removes the state from a list of six – Michigan, Arkansas, Louisiana, 
Indiana, North Dakota and South Dakota -- that currently ban the 
science.

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See map of States in the stem cell debate at:
http://www.stateline.org/live/details/story?contentId=195908

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