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Matthew C. Nisbet, Ph.D, is Associate Professor in the School of Communication at American University where his research focuses on the intersections among science, media, and society. E-MAIL: nisbetmc@gmail.com

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In Missouri, More Political Trouble Over Stem Cell

Category: FRAME: Economic CompetitivenessStem Cell / Cloning Research
Posted on: August 4, 2007 8:56 AM, by Matthew C. Nisbet

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Back in November, when Missouri passed a constitutional amendment protecting the ability of scientists to conduct embryonic stem cell research in the state, it was heralded as one more political victory for science, and a sign that even in the Midwest, proponents had turned the corner on conservative opposition.

Yet the LA Times reports that the Amendment campaign has only served to catalyze opposition within the state legislature and among activists, threatening the state's ability to move forward with research:

The amendment passed by fewer than 51,000 votes, or about two percentage points. The tight margin galvanized opponents. Within weeks, conservative lawmakers had introduced a measure to ban the very research protected by the amendment. That effort failed. But others have succeeded.

This spring, the legislature scratched plans to build an $85-million science center at the University of Missouri. The stated reason: Concern that the labs might one day be used for embryonic research -- even though the university's president explicitly stated they would not. To make sure that embryonic projects would not get funding, lawmakers banned a state science research fund from spending any money on human health -- grants will only go to projects involving plants and animals. Meanwhile, activists are discussing a petition drive to put an embryo-cloning ban on the ballot in 2008: "We're exploring however we can to get this back before the voters," said Pam Fichter, president of Missouri Right to Life.

The political tumult has demoralized Kevin Eggan, an assistant biology professor at Harvard who was seriously considering bringing his embryonic stem-cell lab to the Stowers Institute. Eggan grew up in the Midwest and said he'd like to return; plus, he said, "the Stowers is the Taj Mahal of science." After the November election, he thought he might take the leap. Now, he's sure he won't. "Anyone who does the kind of work I do," said Eggan, "would never consider going there now."

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Comments

1

It's as if they want to deprive themselves of all talent. I would hope that their own financial interests would inform their decision, as it has for many conservatives.

Banning funding for human health research. Incredible.

Posted by: Ryan | August 4, 2007 7:54 PM

2

Huh.

When I left Missouri 3 years ago St. Louis was trying to remake itself as a bioscience capital. The city was launching all kinds of tax breaks for chemical and bioscience companies and financing several laboratory spaces and research institutions. Guess that this kind of throws a big stupid wrench into those works...

Posted by: Toaster Sunshine | August 4, 2007 11:39 PM

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