With his declaration of candidacy for President, Senator Ted Cruz has unfortunately launched the Republican Party into the same realm of lawlessness traversed by the Democratic Party when its delegates nominated Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. Neither man is eligible to be President based upon the qualifications listed in the U.S. Constitution.
The Constitution
makes a clear distinction between the citizenship requirements for a U.S.
Representative (Article I, Section 1), U.S. Senator (Article I, Section 2), and
the President (Article II, Section 1). While Representatives and Senators have
more lenient citizenship requirements (they must only be "citizens"
for a specified period of time), the President has to be a "natural
born citizen." Of all the millions of jobs in the U.S., only two jobs
-- President and Vice-President -- require the worker to be a "natural
born citizen."1
The critical question is obviously this: What did the writers of the U.S. Constitution mean by the term "natural born" when they applied this unique requirement to the President? 2
The critical question is obviously this: What did the writers of the U.S. Constitution mean by the term "natural born" when they applied this unique requirement to the President? 2
The Founding
Fathers relied heavily upon the work of Swiss philosopher Emerich
de Vattel when drafting
the Constitution. In 1758 Vattel wrote the following
in The
Law of Nations: "...natural born citizens,
are those born in the country, of parents who are citizens...The country
of the fathers is therefore that of the children...in order to be of the
country, it is necessary that a person be born of a father who is a
citizen; for, if he is born there of a foreigner, it will be only the place
of his birth, and not his country" (emphasis added).3 The
Founders rightly understood that the most influential component of a child's
upbringing is his parents - and the cultural, philosophical, political, and
religious influence of a child's parents fundamentally establish the direction
of his future conduct and decision making.
In the U.S.
Supreme Court case Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. 162 (1875), which is the
only defining precedent on the Constitution's use of the term "natural
born Citizen," the Court concluded the following: "At common-law,
with the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar,
it was never doubted that all children born in a country of parents who
were its citizens became themselves, upon their birth, citizens also. These
were natives, or natural-born citizens, as distinguished from aliens or
foreigners" (emphasis added).4
Numerous
writers are already trying to validate Ted Cruz's eligibility, stating he can
be President because he is a U.S. "citizen." Is it enough for Senator
Cruz to be a "citizen," or is something more required by the term
"natural born"? What are the categories of U.S. citizenship, and who
might qualify to be President under those various types of citizenship status?
Category
I. A person is a U.S. citizen if he is born in the U.S., even if neither parent
is a U.S. citizen (as long as his parents are not
foreign diplomats). This is the citizenship status of Louisiana Governor Bobby
Jindal, who is listed alongside Senator Ted Cruz in national straw polls as a
prospective Presidential candidate. Jindal's parents were student visa holders
from India when he was born; neither of his parents was a U.S. citizen. While
Governor Jindal is obviously a patriotic American, another U.S. citizen of this
same citizenship category was not -- yet he could have been considered for
the Presidency if the Founder's definition of a natural born citizen is
rejected. I refer to the radical al-Qaeda leader Anwar al-Awlaki, who was a
central figure involved in planning the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center
and Pentagon. Anwar al-Awlaki was born in the U.S. to parents from the country
of Yemen and was thus considered a U.S. "citizen." He met the age and
residence requirements to be President. Would you want to dilute the meaning
of natural born citizen to allow Anwar al-Awlaki to be a candidate for
President?
Category
2. A person is also a U.S. citizen if he is born in the U.S. or anywhere in the
world to one parent who is a U.S. citizen. This situation is complicated, since the child is also
often a dual (or even triple) citizen at birth, receiving the citizenship of
the country where he is born as well as the citizenship of each parent. This is
the situation of Barack Obama, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and possibly Rick
Santorum5. Barack
Obama was a dual U.S. - British citizen at birth (his father was a British
subject of Kenya) and is even now a dual U.S. - Kenyan citizen after adoption of the Kenyan constitution in 2010. If we go
back to Vattel's statement, it is clearly evident from President Obama's
writings and economic and foreign policy decisions that the U.S. is not
"his" country; rather, his allegiance is to the country of his
Islamic father (Kenya), his Islamic step-father (Indonesia), and his
Communist/socialist father-mentors. While I do not doubt the patriotism of
Bobby Jindal, Marco Rubio, and Rick Santorum, who were all raised in the U.S,
the current President should be ample evidence of the dangers of accepting this
category of citizenship as being the same as a "natural born
citizen." Barack Obama's loyalties are clearly to the ideologies of the
nations of his fathers, who were not U.S. citizens.
Also
problematic is the potential for this second citizenship category to result in
dual citizenship. The U.S. Constitution was very carefully crafted by
patriotic, wise men under Divine inspiration. It is no accident that the words
"natural born" precede the citizenship requirement for the President,
while being omitted from the listed qualifications for Representative and
Senator. It was unthinkable that a nation newly freed from foreign
oppression would allow a dual citizen to serve as head-of-state and military
commander-in-chief!
Category
3. A person is a U.S. citizen if he is born to parents who are both U.S.
citizens, regardless of his place of birth. This person is clearly a natural born citizen. As Vattel
wrote, it is the child's parentage that is significant, not the place of his
birth. If both of a child's parents are U.S. citizens, he will be rooted in
American language and culture, even if he is born and raised in a foreign
country (such as to parents who are in the Armed Forces, serving as
missionaries, or working in U.S. diplomacy). This "foreign-born"
circumstance of natural born citizenship was affirmed as recently as 2008, in
the case of Republican nominee Senator John McCain, who was born to U.S.
citizens who were serving on a U.S. military base in the Panama Canal Zone. All
but three, and possibly four5, of the current prospective
Presidential candidates fit this citizenship category; voters need look no
further than these candidates, but should omit from consideration all
candidates from the other citizenship categories.
Category
4. A person may become a "naturalized" citizen after fulfilling
various requirements of legal immigration, lawful residence in the U.S., and
examination. Naturalized citizens may serve as
U.S. Representatives or Senators, but they clearly do not have the same
citizenship status as natural born citizens.
Ted Cruz and
Barack Obama were both dual
citizens at birth, not natural born citizens whose
parents both owed allegiance to the United States. While I do not doubt Senator
Cruz's loyalty to the United States (and I appreciate his decision to
relinquish his Canadian citizenship), he can never satisfy the "letter of
the law" stated in the U.S. Constitution. Harvard law professors (writing
in the Harvard Review to try to justify Ted Cruz's eligibility), Congressional
Research Services staff (Jack Haskell's memorandum to Congress seeking to
justify Barack Obama's eligibility6), the courts, and Congress have
no authority to change what the U.S. Constitution clearly states and intended: The
President of the United States can only be a person whose parents were both
U.S. citizens.
Ted Cruz claims
to be a defender of the Constitution, yet he is violating
that very document in seeking the Presidency.
The Idaho Republican Party is unfortunately complicit in this constitutional
violation by listing Ted Cruz (as well as Bobby Jindal, Marco Rubio, and
potentially ineligible candidate Rick Santorum5) on their web site's
straw poll of prospective Republican Presidential candidates.7 Wise
voters can reject Senator Cruz as a candidate, even if he chooses not to drop
out of the race before the Republican primaries and caucuses begin in 2016. And
we can support his efforts in the U.S. Senate, an office for which he is
unquestionably eligible.
1 According to a Bureau of Labor Statistics representative,
almost 250 million persons held jobs in the U.S. labor force as of February
2015. Data obtained by phone on March 25, 2015. (Bureau of Labor Statistics,
202-691-5200).
2 By implication, the Vice-President must also be a natural
born citizen, because the Vice-President shall assume the responsibilities of
President under specified circumstances stated in the Fifteenth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution.
3 Quoted from Paul R. Hollrah's essay "The Obama
Eligibility Question," November 9, 2012. Additional information from this
essay also informed the content of this article.
4 Ibid.
5 I could find no conclusive evidence that Rick Santorum's
father Aldo, who immigrated to the U.S. at age seven, ever became a U.S.
citizen. In this article Rick Santorum dismisses questions about Barack Obama's
eligibility, apparently believing it is "enough" that Obama's mother
was a U.S. citizen and Obama was (theoretically) born in the U.S. Documentation
has been presented regarding Aldo's legal immigration, but not his oath of
allegiance to the U.S./naturalization: http://www.wnd.com/2011/12/376953/#! I
sent a request to Santorum's grassroots group Patriot Voices asking for
information about the citizenship status of Santorum's parents, but have not
yet received a satisfactory reply - only a statement that he hasn't yet
declared his candidacy. I believe it is Santorum's responsibility to prove both
his parents were U.S. citizens at the time of his birth, given that his father
was an immigrant.
6 This is one sample article discussing the Jack Haskell
memorandum to Congress regarding Barack Obama's eligibility and the lack of any
mechanism to vet the qualifications of Presidential candidates: http://www.wnd.com/2010/11/225561/#!
Source:http://freedomoutpost.com/2015/03/ted-cruz-the-qualifications-for-president-of-the-united-states/
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