Bush Dismisses Members From Bioethics Council - Los Angeles Times
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Bush Dismisses Members From Bioethics Council

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From Times Wire Services

President Bush on Friday dismissed two members of his Council on Bioethics -- a scientist and a moral philosopher who had been among the more outspoken advocates for research on human embryo cells.

In their places he appointed three new members, including a doctor who has called for more religion in public life, a political scientist who has spoken out against the research that the dismissed members supported, and another who has written about the immorality of abortion and the “threats of biotechnology.â€

The turnover immediately renewed charges by scientists and others that Bush is increasingly allowing politics to trump science as he seeks advice on ethically contentious issues.

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Some in Congress, led by Rep. Henry D. Waxman (D-Los Angeles), have been vocal on the topic, as have academics, scientific organizations and science journal editors.

One of the dismissed members, Elizabeth Blackburn, is a renowned biologist at UC San Francisco. Blackburn said she received a call Friday from a person in the White House personnel office.

“He said the White House had decided to make some changes on the council,†Blackburn said.

The other dismissed member, William May, a professor of ethics emeritus at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, could not be reached for comment.

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Asked why Blackburn and May had been let go, White House spokeswoman Erin Healy said the two members’ terms had expired in January, and they were on “holdover status.â€

The three new appointees are Benjamin Carson, the director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins University; Diana Schaub, chairman of the department of political science at Loyola College in Maryland; and Peter Lawler, a professor of government at Berry College in Georgia.

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