There are other, big fights going on up on Capitol Hill besides
the SCOTUS nomination, and none is bigger than the imminent
legislative action on embryonic and non-embryonic stem cell
research. Sources up on the Hill say it’s possible that within the
next week, the Labor-Health and Human Service-Education
Appropriations bill will hit the Senate floor. “It could come as
early as tomorrow [Friday],” says a Senate source.
Why is this such a big deal? Because Senator Arlen
Specter, better known these days as chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, has been agitating for a vote on embryonic
stem cell research before the end of this legislative year, and he
has threatened to use the Labor-Health approps bill to get it.
Conservative Republicans are said to be concerned that he will
offer this embryonic stem cell research legislation as an amendment
during floor debate on the appropriations bill.
Specter got a somewhat unexpected ally earlier this year when
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist declared his
support for killing human embryos. But Senate insiders say Frist
has been hesitant to bring a stand-alone bill to the floor out of
concerns such a bill would take days of debate off what is a tight
legislative calendar.
Now word is coming out of the White House that it might not be
opposed to Specter being allowed to offer his stem cell legislation
as an amendment to the Labor-Health approps bill. And what does the
White House get out of it? Specter’s backing off from vocal
criticism of SCOTUS nominee Harriet Miers.
“We don’t do that kind of horsetrading on those kinds of
issues,” says a White House source.
But the Miers nomination now may be in enough trouble that a
desperate White House might be willing to look the other way for
Specter’s silence.
*****
UPDATE (As posted on AmSpecBlog at 4:26:53 PM
on Oct. 21): It looks like Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist did
good by getting Sen. Arlen Specter to back off his demands for a
fast vote on stem cell legislation. Specter had been threatening an
attempt to tack his embryonic stem cell bill onto the Labor-HHS
appropriations bill that is hitting the Senate floor shortly.