Stem cell bond issue has narrow lead in poll
By Associated Press,
Associated Press
| 10. 11. 2004
A controversial measure that would provide $3 billion in state bond money to pay for human embryonic stem cell research holds a narrow margin of support among voters, according to a new Field Poll.
Proposition 71, designed to get around the Bush administration's funding limits on such research, would authorize the state to sell bonds to provide annual payments of about $300 million to scientists and companies doing stem cell research.
The poll found that 46 percent of likely voters support the idea with 39 percent opposed and 15 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.3 percentage points.
The numbers are a slight improvement from an August poll that found 45 percent supported the bond measure to 42 percent opposed.
Supporters of the proposition -- including a coalition of influential Democratic donors and several Silicon Valley tycoons -- have raised more than $12 million for the campaign and are running TV ads.
The Field Poll found that half of those surveyed said they had seen or heard something about the initiative -- an improvement since August of 10 percentage...
Related Articles
By Jocelyn Kaiser , Science | 10.09.2024
Rare and fatal, the genetic disease known as cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) devastates the brain in young boys. A mutation on the X chromosome leads to a buildup of fats that damage the insulation around nerve cells, leading to seizures, blindness...
By Don Sapatkin, Managed Healthcare Executive | 09.20.2024
Gene therapy comes with the expectation that it will “cure” an expanding number of genetic disorders. If you’ve never wondered – and even if you have -- what that word actually means, four Dutch researchers have a surprise in store...
By Heidi Ledford, Nature | 09.17.2024
For most of her life, Genesis Jones’s daily routine revolved around her illness, the painful blood disorder known as sickle-cell disease. Each time she left the house, she ran through a mental checklist: did she have her pain medications...
By Gina Kolata, The New York Times | 09.16.2024
There was supposed to be a special party for Kendric Cromer, 12, last Wednesday, but it had to be postponed because he was too groggy to celebrate.
It was meant to mark the first day of his new life —...