If you missed it, be sure to check out White House Chief of Staff [tag]Josh Bolten[/tag]’s performance on [tag]Meet the Press[/tag] yesterday. Tim Russert must have eaten his Wheaties because when it came to the president’s [tag]veto[/tag] on [tag]stem-cell[/tag] [tag]research[/tag] [tag]funding[/tag], he asked all the right questions. Unfortunately for Bolten, he didn’t have the right answers.
Russert, noting Tony Snow’s choice of words, asked Bolten, “Does the president believe the use of an embryo for stem cell research is murder?” Bolten wouldn’t say directly, but he implicitly agreed, explaining the administration’s belief that a “human embryo is a human life that deserves protection.”
Russert followed with the logical next step: “If the president believes it is human life, how can he allow private stem cell research to go forward, go forward, if, in fact, that is murder?” Bolten couldn’t explain, saying only that it’s a “very difficult balance.” Russert followed-up again, noting that we’re using federal funds for existing embryo lines, which suggests we’re funding experimentation on embryos “obtained by homicidal means.” Again, Bolten hedged. Russert tried to explain the problem to his guest.
“The logic, Mr. Bolten, as people are listening to this, the president is saying no, we can’t use embryos that are going to be discarded by in vitro clinics because, according to a spokesman, that’s murder. But we can use embryos that were existing before I became president, that’s OK. And if you have a private company and you want to use those embryos, that’s OK. Back to the central question: does the president agree with his spokesman, Tony Snow, that the research on the embryo in, in fact, to use that embryo is murder? […]
“Would you then move to close down in vitro clinics — if, in fact, those embryos are being created and used by private companies for research and the president’s spokesman says that’s murder, and the president said it’s a human life, why not then close down the in vitro fertility clinics? Because they’re creating embryos that, in the president’s view, will be murdered.
If it was boxing, a referee would have stopped the fight. Russert kept asking for an explanation of a policy that doesn’t make any sense, and Bolten kept struggling to get the interview over with.
It got particularly interesting when Russert asked Bolten to explain Karl Rove’s take on the issue.
Russert: Karl Rove, the president’s chief political adviser, said that adult stem cells show far more promise than embryonic stem cells, and the White House could not identify any scientist who could confirm that. Is—does the president agree with Mr. Rove?
Bolten: I’m, I’m no scientist, not, not quantified to speak on it, but I think the point that Karl was getting at is that there are alternative means to achieve some of the promise of the — of the embryonic stem cells that, that scientists…
Russert: No, he said “far more promise.”
Bolten: Well…
Russert: Can you — can you cite any scientist who believes that adult stem cells have far more promise than embryonic stem cells?
Bolten: Well I can’t cite scientists on either side of it, but what I can tell you is that adult, adult human stem cells have already shown enormous utility in, in the amelioration of disease in this country. Embryonic stem cells have, have yet to fulfill the promise that many see, but, but there — but there is a legitimate promise there, and that’s why the president has struggled so much with that difficult balance…(unintelligible).
Russert: But is there any — is there any evidence that you’re aware of, or the president’s aware of, that says that adult stem cells show far more promise than embryonic?
Bolten: Adult stem cells have already demonstrated for — in the amelioration of disease…
Russert: So you agree with Mr. Rove.
Bolten: I — like I said I’m not — I’m not a scientist and I don’t…
Russert: Well, I don’t think Karl Rove is, either.
Bolten: Well, he knows a lot of stuff…
Actually, Rove doesn’t. His claim was demonstrably false; Bolten just didn’t want to say so.
C&L and TP have video, and the transcript is online. It was a train wreck.