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This is a news release from the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC) in Washington, D.C., issued on Wednesday, June
6, 2007, at 6:45 PM EDT. For further information, call
202-626-8820, send e-mail to
Legfederal@aol.com, or follow the links below.
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U.S. House turns back stealth attempt
by Democratic leadership
to pass "clone-and-kill" bill
WASHINGTON (June 6, 2007) -- The U.S. House of Representatives
today rejected a bill, deceptively labeled as a ban on human
cloning, that actually would have allowed large-scale cloning of
human embryos solely for purposes of research.
The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) condemned the
measure as "a clone-and-kill bill," and strongly opposed it.
After the vote, NRLC Legislative Director Douglas Johnson
commented, "The House Democratic leadership tried to ram through
a bill to pave the way for cloned human embryo farms, but their
scam failed."
The White House issued a statement before the vote that said
in part, "The Administration is strongly opposed to any
legislation that would . . . permit the creation of cloned
embryos or development of human embryo farms for research, which
would require the destruction of nascent human life. Thus, if
legislation were presented to the President that permitted human
embryos to be created, developed, and destroyed simply for
research purposes, his senior advisors would recommend that he
veto the bill."
The vote on the bill, H.R. 2560, was 204-213
-- short of
a majority, and 74 votes short of the two-thirds majority
that was required for approval under the fast-track
procedure that the House Democratic leadership used to try
to rush the bill through less than a day after its
introduction.
The bill, H.R. 2560, was introduced by Rep. Diana DeGette
(D-Co.) only Tuesday night, and brought to the House floor early
the next day (today) under a procedure (called Suspension of the
Rules) usually employed for noncontroversial matters.
The language of the bill was not even available on the official
congressional website when the measure was debated on the House
floor. However, NRLC obtained the bill text late Tuesday, and
warned House members in an e-mailed letter: "While H.R. 2560 is
titled 'The Human Cloning Prohibition Act' . . . in reality,
H.R. 2560 does not ban any human cloning at all. H.R. 2560
would allow -- indeed, it is carefully constructed to encourage
-- the creation of any number of cloned human embryos. H.R.
2560 would allow development of these cloned human embryos
(individual members, male or female, of the species Homo
sapiens) in the laboratory, perhaps even for weeks, so that
they can be killed in order to harvest their stem cells or used
in other research that will kill them -- a practice opposed by
about 75% of the public."
To read the entire June 6 NRLC letter to U.S. House members,
click
here.
NRLC's Douglas Johnson commented, "Any statement in any news
story claiming that the bill would have banned 'cloning a human
being' is false. Successful use of the cloning process called
'somatic cell nuclear transfer' (the same cloning process that
created Dolly the sheep and thousands of other mammalian
clones), utilizing human genetic material, will produce an
embryo of the species Homo sapiens, which biologically
is a human being. A journalist who asserts that this
bill 'bans the cloning of a human being,' when the bill clearly
permits the mass creation of human embryos by cloning, has
embraced the position that a human embryo is not a
human being -- which is, to say the least, taking one side's
position on a hotly disputed subject."
NRLC supports the Weldon-Stupak Human Cloning Prohibition Act
(H.R. 2564), which would prohibit the creation of human
embryos by cloning nationwide. The House passed the bill in
2001 and 2003, but the Senate has never acted on it. The United
Nations General Assembly in 2005 urged all member nations to
enact such comprehensive bans on human cloning, and at least 23
nations have already done so, including Germany, France, and
Canada.
The House will vote on June 7 on a separate bill, S. 5, that
would mandate federal funding of the type of stem cell research
that requires the killing of human embryos. President Bush has
already said that he will veto that bill.
To
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To
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