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Dr. David Satcher won Senate confirmation on Tuesday as surgeon general,
becoming the first person in more than three years to fill a post
that has become a lightning rod in the nation's battles over abortion
and family values. Satcher, the 56-year-old director of the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, a federal agency whose headquarters
are in Atlanta, prevailed on a vote of 63 to 35 after conservatives
led by Sen. John Ashcroft of Missouri, an aspiring Republican presidential
nominee, fell far short of the 60 votes needed to prevent a vote on
President Clinton's nominee. ``I can think of no one better qualified
to be surgeon general,'' said Sen. Bill Frist of Tennessee, a doctor
who had appealed to his fellow Republicans to support Satcher for
the post, whose occupant is sometimes known as ``America's family
doctor.'' Ultimately, 19 Republicans joined 44 Democrats in voting
for Satcher's confirmation. In a statement after the vote, the president
called his nominee ``a mainstream physician who is an eloquent advocate
for the health of all Americans.'' He said Satcher would be ``a leading
voice'' in the effort to pass comprehensive tobacco legislation this
year. Satcher, an expert in sickle cell anemia who has embraced a
wide range of public health concerns, was initially considered a non-provocative
choice by the White House and an antidote to the controversy that
had swirled around the surgeon general's post since the start of the
Clinton presidency. The last person to hold the job, Dr. Joycelyn
Elders, was dismissed by Clinton after making impolitic remarks on
masturbation. And Dr. Henry Foster Jr., an obstetrician whom Clinton
tapped to succeed her, saw his nomination founder in 1995 when he
acknowledged that he had performed abortions. Despite his 12-to-5
approval by a Senate committee, Satcher unexpectedly ran into trouble
from conservatives last fall because he agreed with the president
that a ban on a form of abortion in the late stages of pregnancy,
called ``partial birth abortion'' by opponents, should contain an
exception for the health of the mother. Satcher's opponents also raised
ethical questions about experiments that the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention had conducted in which pregnant African women infected
with the AIDS virus were given placebos. And they protested that the
doctor had supported a study of needle exchange programs intended
to stop the spread of HIV among drug addicts. ``In my view, it does
not make sense to give dope addicts needles with which to conduct
their poisonous activity,'' Ashcroft said on Tuesday, leading the
debate against Satcher. Ashcroft, who would like to run for president
in 2000 and is vying for the allegiance of social conservatives in
his party, maintained that Satcher's position on abortion made him
unfit to be surgeon general. ``This is about whether someone who is
indifferent to infanticide can care for our children,'' he said. Across
several days of debate, Ashcroft tried to turn the confirmation vote
into a broad critique of what he called ``failure after failure, morally
and ethically,'' by the Clinton administration. But several prominent
Republicans spoke on Satcher's behalf, citing his long history of
public service and his rise from a family of poor black farmers in
rural Alabama to become the head of the disease control centers. ``Frankly,
I find his life inspiring,'' said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. ``He is
an American success story.'' Frist strongly defended Satcher, even
though he disagreed with the nominee on abortion. He cited Satcher's
promise to him that as surgeon general he would ``focus on issues
that unite Americans, not divide them,'' including campaigns against
smoking and teen-age sex. Frist and other supporters said Satcher's
nomination had never been in serious jeopardy despite being caught
up in the abortion issue. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said the
opposition to Satcher ``was really an excuse to play to the raw emotions
that are out there on this difficult and emotional issue.'' Satcher's
medical career has been marked by the twin themes of race and poverty.
He was the driving force behind Clinton's decision last year to apologize
to survivors of the government's notorious Tuskegee experiment, in
which black men in Alabama were left untreated for syphilis. The 40-year
study, which officially ended in 1972, involved more than 600 men.
On Tuesday, Satcher called his confirmation as Surgeon General ``an
American dream come true.''