Hillary Rodham Clinton took another sharp jab at the Bush administration as she outlined her science policy Thursday.
The front-runner in the 2008 Democratic presidential campaign unveiled her agenda for the scientific community at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C.
Under her administration, she said, the federal government would return to funding "ethical embryonic stem-cell research," ban political appointees' interference with government scientists' conclusions, elevate a science advisor to report directly to the president, and boost research into space exploration, the earth sciences and alternative energy.
The front-runner in the 2008 Democratic presidential campaign unveiled her agenda for the scientific community at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C.
Under her administration, she said, the federal government would return to funding "ethical embryonic stem-cell research," ban political appointees' interference with government scientists' conclusions, elevate a science advisor to report directly to the president, and boost research into space exploration, the earth sciences and alternative energy.