by
Mitt Romney
June 19, 2007
Late
last week, two developments involving stem-cell research offered a
sharp contrast between the great strengths of American biomedical
science and the terrible weakness of Washington politics.
First, on Wednesday, we learned that researchers in Massachusetts,
building on prior accomplishments by colleagues in Japan, had managed
to transform regular skin cells into the equivalent of embryonic stem
cells in mice. Their work points to a way to produce cells with the
qualities scientists value about embryonic stem cells, but without
the need to create, harm, or destroy human embryos, and therefore
without ethical or political controversy.
But then, on Thursday, the Congress passed a bill that would for the
first time use taxpayer dollars to encourage the destruction of embryos
for research. Just as it is becoming increasingly clear that scientific
ingenuity could offer a way around the divisive controversies of the
stem-cell debate, congressional Democrats are working to stoke those
very controversies. They have opted to exacerbate what they see as
a political debate that works in their favor, rather than encourage
a scientific solution that would work in America's favor.
When I was governor of Massachusetts, my state wrestled with the stem-cell
debate and I confronted many of the same issues now being debated
in Washington. I carefully listened to all sides, and came to reject
the idea that the exploration of stem cells had to come into conflict
with America's commitment to the dignity of human life.
Some advocates told me that only the creation of human embryos for
purposes of experimentation, otherwise known as cloning, could help
them better understand and perhaps someday treat a series of dreaded
diseases. But they ignored the importance of protecting human equality,
dignity, and life. Opposing advocates told me that the pluripotency
of stem cells — their ability to become a very wide variety of different
cell types — would not be of great therapeutic value, and that other
sources of tissues and cells could serve the same purpose. But they
ignored the unique role pluripotent cells could play in basic science.
Couldn't the strongest part of each side's argument — the utility of pluripotent cells on the one hand and the importance of protecting human life on the other — be brought together?
I
studied the issue for many months, and entered into conversation with
experts from across the nation who were looking for consensus solutions,
like Stanford’s Dr. William Hurlbut. In the end, I became persuaded
that the stem-cell debate was grounded in a false premise, and that
the way through it was around it: by the use of scientific techniques
that could produce the equivalent of embryonic stem cells but without
cloning, creating, harming, or destroying developing human lives.
A number of such techniques have begun to emerge in recent years,
and as last week's exciting scientific publications showed, some of
the world's best stem-cell scientists are hard at work bringing them
to fruition.
Moreover,
two of these techniques, Altered Nuclear Transfer and Direct Reprogramming
could produce patient-specific stem-cell lines for the study of diseases.
Our government should encourage and support these scientific developments,
rather than undermine the effort to find a solution. Finding cures
to diseases using methods that uphold ethical principles and sustain
social consensus should be the objective of America's approach to
stem-cell research.
Rather than looking for such solutions, however, the Democrats in
Congress have decided to turn back the clock and pass a bill that
only sets research and ethics at odds, a bill they know will be vetoed
by President Bush. This familiar Washington approach to controversial
issues is just wrong. On matters of such significance, we should try
to bring the country together, not further divide it.
Support for ethical biomedical research should be part of our collective
identity as a noble society. Instead of turning the quest for cures
into a partisan battle, Congress should embrace the exciting emerging
lines of research that could meet the goals of all sides in the stem-cell
debate. A bill to support just such a positive approach to stem cell
research passed the Senate in April by a whopping margin of 70 to
28. But the House Democratic leadership, choosing politics over the
prospect of consensus on science, appears to be unwilling even to
allow a vote on that hopeful legislation.
It is time to move beyond typical Washington politics, and offer support
for stem-cell research techniques that bring science and ethics together
to promote life, protect life, and save lives.


