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RALEIGH -- The campaign for governor is being waged with a wheelchair and dead parents.
The Democratic and Republican candidates are rolling out emotional tales and images to jab each other over embryonic stem cell research, a complex scientific and moral question of life-saving cures versus snuffing out life.
The debate, oddly timed given that voters are sweating a national economic meltdown, may appear to fall under Washington's jurisdiction. State governments, though, have increasingly provided the arena for settling the issue.
Here's where other candidates stand on embryonic stem cell research.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Robert Pittenger, Republican: "I support [non-embryonic] stem cell research. To date, there have been 73 medical findings improving the health of individuals with serious diseases from adult stem cell research. There have been no discoveries after 27 years of research with embryonic stem cell research. It seems illogical at this time to challenge a very important medical ethics position and open the door to research that could become a black market for harvesting eggs for embryonic stem cell research. We need to focus our treatments to give the greatest help to the most patients."
Walter Dalton, Democrat: "I believe that stem cell research, which includes amniotic, embryonic, and adult stem cells, is going to be an important part of saving lives. That's why I was proud to sponsor legislation to fund research in this vital area through our first class universities. We've made enormous advances in cancer research right here in North Carolina and have been committed to finding a cure, but we must bring that same level of commitment to finding a cure for Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, ALS, Diabetes, and many of the other terrible illnesses that strike our friends and loved ones everyday."
U.S. SENATE
Elizabeth Dole, Republican: "I do not support embryonic stem cell research, and I do not support state or federal funding for it. However, I support numerous stem cell research methods - such as adult and cord blood stem cell research - that don't require destruction of life."
Kay Hagan, Democrat: "I support [embryonic] stem cell research, which could help those suffering with cancer, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, juvenile diabetes and many other diseases. This research is critical not only from a scientific perspective, possibly leading to finding the causes of and cures for these diseases, but also to position North Carolina on the cutting edge of a bio-tech focused emerging economy."
Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue, the Democratic candidate, recently deployed a television ad featuring Sarah Witt of Raleigh, a former marathon runner now paralyzed by a neurological disease, who speaks from a wheelchair, with the aid of an electronic voice box. Witt criticizes the Republican nominee, Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory, for opposing embryonic stem cell research.
"A motor neuron disease has already taken away my ability to walk and to speak, but it hasn't taken away my ability to hope. Hope that stem cell research will let me see my kids grow up," Witt says. "How can he be against hope?"
The ad is part of Perdue's continuing effort to paint McCrory as an extreme conservative.
McCrory returned fire with an ad featuring his sister, Linda Sebastian, who scolds Perdue for suggesting McCrory is insensitive to suffering and highlights that their parents died of "long illnesses" -- Alzheimer's disease and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
"Using a victim of terrible disease for political gain is shameful. Pat McCrory supports stem cell research when a human embryo is not destroyed," Sebastian said in the ad, referring to advancements made in research using non- embryonic stem cells, such as those derived from human skin.
McCrory's strategist, Jack Hawke, said Monday that McCrory would sign a bill that banned embryonic stem cell research. On Tuesday, though, McCrory was less definitive.
"I don't know the details of what we can do now enough to know," McCrory said. "I'd have to get back to you on that."
Perdue, on the other hand, is stoking an issue on which she has previously played no visible role. Her campaign could not provide a public statement she has made on the issue before the campaign.
Rep. Earl Jones, a Greensboro Democrat who sponsored a bill for stem cell funding last year, said he didn't hear from Perdue until after it passed the House, even though the funding would come through the Health & Wellness Trust Fund of which she is the chairwoman. But he said she stepped in once it reached the Senate, where it never got out of committee.
"She was the first person to call me," he said. "She wanted to know what she could do."
Stem cells' promise
Embryonic stem cells are derived from the inside of a fertilized human egg, usually from a fertilization clinic. Stem cells can develop specialized cells from which various human tissues form and can renew themselves. Scientists are using them to try and cure currently incurable diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Opponents condemn the research as destroying a human life, but supporters argue that the embryos used are those that fertility clinics are going to destroy anyway.
Congress and President Bush banned federal funding for research on new lines of embryonic stem cells in 2001 but didn't ban the research itself. That left the opportunity for private institutions and states to step in, prompting debates and either bans against, or funding for, the research.
Perdue said she would push for state funding for embryonic stem cell research and that voters will pay attention to the issue, even in the midst of the dire financial news.
"I think the people of the state are eat up right now, as I am, with concern over the economy and the future," Perdue said last week. "But they also, if they've got a quadriplegic or a kid who has severe diabetes, they worry about how they can help that kid live or function longer."
McCrory's campaign said he supports stem cell research from non-controversial sources, which shows increasing promise for results, but Hawke said McCrory would support a ban on embryonic research.
States' actions
North Carolina's legislature has not considered a ban. The state House passed a bill last year providing state funding that the Senate never considered.
At least six states -- Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, North Dakota and South Dakota -- have banned stem cell research that involves the destruction of an embryo, according to stateline.org, a nonprofit group that monitors the workings of state governments.
Seven other states have invested funding in the research: California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, New York and Wisconsin. Three states -- Iowa, Massachusetts and Missouri -- have re-established or underscored the legality of the research, according to stateline.
In 2006 and 2007, states awarded $230 million in grants for stem cell research. Last year, New York and Illinois cleared the way for state funding, while Iowa overturned its ban. Michigan voters will decide in November whether to overturn that state's ban.
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