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How to Override the Bush Stem Cell Veto

April 10, 2007

With Harry Reid's stem cell research bill headed to a Senate vote this week, Congressional Democrats and President Bush are on the brink of yet another confrontation. But while the White House is promising to repeat its 2006 veto, the ending can be different this time. All the Reid legislation needs is a name change - and a little help from Ronald Reagan.
The failure to override President Bush's veto in 2006 shows that broad bipartisan backing in Congress, aggressive action in the states and the overwhelming support of the American people are not enough. To overcome White House intransigence that is crippling American leadership in finding potential life-saving treatments through stem cell research, another tack is needed.
Which is where Ronald Reagan and a little creative marketing come in.
Harry Reid should simply change the name of his bill from "Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2007" to the "Ronald Reagan Life Legacy Act of 2007." By taking a page from the Republican handbook, Democrats can use dictate the terms of debate through branding alone.
As I first suggested back in 2005, a renamed "Ronald Reagan Life Legacy Act" would fundamentally transform the politics surrounding the stem cell issue. It's not merely that Nancy Reagan and family would renew their high profile public support. Social conservatives who bow down before the altar of Reagan would be forced to vote against his memory. GOP presidential aspirants hoping to claim the Gipper's mantle would face the stark choice between battling Reagan's disease or battling his wife. Bush NIH director Dr. Elias Zerhouni surely wouldn't be the only one to crack under the public pressure and emerging scientific consensus.
So Democrats, make President Bush and his remaining allies choose. You're either with Ronald Reagan or you're against him.

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Jon Perr
Jon Perr is a technology marketing consultant and product strategist who writes about American politics and public policy.

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