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Yes, Ted Cruz is a “natural-born” citizen -- even in an originalist reading of the clause
Instapundit ^ | 01/13/2016 | E.P. Foley

Posted on 01/13/2016 7:43:19 AM PST by SeekAndFind

IS TED CRUZ A “NATURAL BORN” U.S. CITIZEN?: According to Widener law school’s Mary Brigid McManamon, who has an oped in the Washington Post today, the answer is “no.” Her reasoning is a bit shaky:

On this subject, the common law is clear and unambiguous. The 18th-century English jurist William Blackstone, the preeminent authority on it, declared natural-born citizens are "such as are born within the dominions of the crown of England," while aliens are "such as are born out of it." The key to this division is the assumption of allegiance to one's country of birth. The Americans who drafted the Constitution adopted this principle for the United States. James Madison, known as the "father of the Constitution," stated, "It is an established maxim that birth is a criterion of allegiance. [And] place is the most certain criterion; it is what applies in the United States." . . .

Article I of the Constitution grants Congress the power to naturalize an alien. . . . But Article II of the Constitution expressly adopts the legal status of the natural-born citizen and requires that a president possess that status. . . . Congress simply does not have the power to convert someone born outside the United States into a natural-born citizen.

McManamon’s quotation from Blackstone’s Commentaries purposefully omits key language. Specifically, Blackstone stated:

Natural-born subjects are such as are born within the dominions of the crown of England, that is, within the ligeance [sic] or as is generally called, the allegiance of the king; and alien such as are born out of it.

The key to this passage is the concept of “allegiance”–whether the individual has been born with allegiance to the king, or not. Individuals born with allegiance to the sovereign are ”natural-born” subjects; those lacking such allegiance are not. It is not, as McManamon implies from her selective portion, a question merely of being born within the geographic confines of the country. McManamon’s citation to the James Madison passage confirms this, as Madison acknowledges that “place is the most certain criterion,” but he is not suggesting that it is the only criterion, as he states unequivocally that the “established maxim” is that the ultimate criterion is “allegiance,” of which the place of birth is but one (albeit “certain”) criterion.

Article I, section eight gives Congress the authority to “establish a uniform rule of Naturalization,” and thus identify, by statute, those who must to go through a naturalization process to obtain U.S. citizenship. Those citizens who do not need to go through the naturalization process are “natural born” citizens. As former Solicitors General Neil Katyal and Paul Clement have recently noted in the Harvard Law Review Forum,

All the sources routinely used to interpret the Constitution confirm that the phrase "natural born Citizen" has a specific meaning: namely, someone who was a U.S. citizen at birth with no need to go through a naturalization proceeding at some later time. And Congress has made equally clear from the time of the framing of the Constitution to the current day that, subject to certain residency requirements on the parents, someone born to a U.S. citizen parent generally becomes a U.S. citizen without regard to whether the birth takes place in Canada, the Canal Zone, or the continental United States. . . .

The Supreme Court has long recognized that two particularly useful sources in understanding constitutional terms are British common law and enactments of the First Congress. Both confirm that the original meaning of the phrase "natural born Citizen" includes persons born abroad who are citizens from birth based on the citizenship of a parent.

McManamon asserts that Katyal and Clement behave in an “unforgivable” fashion by “equat[ing] the common law with statutory law.” But they do no such thing. Instead, Katyal and Clement correctly note that the longstanding British legal understanding–as evidenced both by its common and statutory law–was that children born abroad to British subjects were, themselves, “natural born” subjects at birth, without the need for naturalization proceedings. As Randy Barnett succinctly put it,

England had numerous and changing legal rules governing exactly who was and who was not a "natural born subject," which can be used to muddy the waters. But one consistently applied rule is particularly germane: The offspring of the King were natural born subjects of the King regardless of where they were born, whether on English territory or not.

As We the People–both individually and collectively–posses the sovereignty in the U.S., our offspring are the functional equivalent of he King’s offspring in England–i.e., “natural born” citizens of the U.S., regardless of where they are born.

Indeed, by the time of Blackstone’s Commentaries (published beginning in 1765), Blackstone himself acknowledged that the law of England had evolved to recognize “that all children, born out of the king’s ligeance [sic] whose fathers were natural-born subjects, are now natural-born subjects themselves, to all intents and purposes, without any exception.”

McManamon also criticizes Katyal and Clement for placing “much weight” on the Naturalization Act of 1790, which stated that “the children of citizens of the United States that may be born beyond Sea, or out of the limits of the United States, shall be considered as natural born Citizens: provided, That the right of citizenship shall not descend to persons whose fathers have never been resident in the United States . . . .”

Assuming that modern Equal Protection Clause jurisprudence would not permit any constitutional distinction of children based upon fathers versus mothers who are U.S. citizens (Cruz’s mother was a U.S. citizen at his birth; his father was not)–and there is no legal reason, today, to think that a mother who is a U.S. citizen owes less “allegiance” to the U.S. than would the father–the law existing at the time of the U.S. founding suggests that, in interpreting Article II’s phrase “natural born citizen,” children born abroad to U.S. citizens should be considered “natural born.”

McManamon dismisses this evidence of the founding generation’s understanding of “natural born” by asserting:

The debates on the matter reveal that the congressmen were aware that such children were not citizens and had to be naturalized; hence, Congress enacted a statute to provide for them. Moreover, that statute did not say the children were natural born, but only that they should "be considered as" such.

This is specious argument. The 1790 Act reveals that the members of Congress–many of whom were heavily involved in the writing and ratification of the Constitution–understood that children of U.S. citizens who were born abroad should be “considered” as “natural born” in the sense that they did not need to undergo any naturalization process and were accordingly legally entitled to be considered U.S. citizens at the time of their birth–the same as an individual born within U.S. borders. The fact that Congress memorialized this common understanding in the 1790 Act does not, in any way, suggest that such children born abroad “had to be naturalized”; quite the contrary.

In short, while Trump and Harvard Law prof Laurence Tribe are correct that the U.S. Supreme Court has not definitively grappled with the full meaning of “natural born citizen,” the available evidence suggests that if/when the Court ultimately must grapple with it, the evidence points strongly in Cruz’s favor.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: citizen; naturalborn; naturalborncitizen; tedcruz
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1 posted on 01/13/2016 7:43:19 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

More crap from ignorant people who are intent on spreading their ignorance to others.


2 posted on 01/13/2016 7:45:24 AM PST by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no other sovereignty.")
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To: SeekAndFind

Honest to god, I don’t get these people who claim it is all so important that the members put a phrase in when some of the same members took it out.

I have a person on another thread that is arguing just that. Who cares if James Madison took it out and George Washington signed it into law ...as well as other Founding Fathers.

We don’t know why they took it out. BUT THEY DID.

I venture to say it is MANY of people who put it in turned around AND TOOK IT OUT.

To me, that means they didn’t want it there for whatever reason.


3 posted on 01/13/2016 7:46:47 AM PST by RummyChick
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To: SeekAndFind

Had Cruz been born in 1921 under the identical birth circumstances that he was born into in 1970, than he would not even have been a US citizen. The Cable Act, passed in 1922, allowed a US citizen woman, married to a foreign national and who gives birth in a foreign country, to transmit US citizenship onto the newborn child for the first time.

Article II, Section I clause 5, was ratified in 1791 with the rest of the constitution, long before the Cable Act.. Article I has not been modified by any subsequent amendment. Accordingly, the original intent and meaning of Article II stands absent any such constitutional amendment.

The purpose of Article II, Section I clause 5 was to prevent undue foreign influence on the office of the presidency, PARTICULARLY thru a father owing allegiance to a foreign sovereignty. The framers took their definition for NBC from Emmerich De Vattel Law of Nations, the 212th paragraph of which was quoted in its entirety in the 1814 Venus Merchantman SCOTUS decision. The Law of Nations is referred to in Article I of the constitution. That definition referred to an NBC as being born of two citizen parents and born on the soil of the nation. That definition was cited in the 1868 case of Minor vs Hapersett, and Wong Kim Ark vs US. De Vattel has been cited and accepted in dozens of SCOTUS and federal lower court rulings. The framers were patriarchs who believed that the citizenship of the children followed the citizenship of the father.

The authors of the 14th amendment, Senators Howard Jacob and Rep. Bingham also defined an NBC in similar terms.

Obama is the very embodiment and personification of the REASON that the framers put those protections into the constitution. By ignoring it, we have opened ourselves to the anti American and unconstitutional tyranny that Obama poses to our constitutional republic.

Ted Cruz is head and shoulders the best candidate in the race. He is a patriot who loves this country and its people. He is intellectually and philosophically superior to ANYONE else in the race. As much as I admire him, He CANNOT be considered a natural born citizen, as he is a citizen by statute. He was born with THREE countries (The US, Canada, and Cuba thru his father) having a legitimate claim on his allegiance from birth, whether he wanted it or not. I believe in the constitution and the rule of law, NOT in the cult of personality. We should not yield to the same dark impulses of expediency and delusion that gave us the tyrannical sociopathic usurper demagogue Obama.


4 posted on 01/13/2016 7:46:57 AM PST by SubMareener (Save us from Quarterly Freepathons! Become a MONTHLY DONOR!)
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To: SeekAndFind
Those citizens who do not need to go through the naturalization process are "natural born" citizens.

Wrong. Naturalized citizens are those who have been made citizens by virtue of statute, not nature.

Senator Cruz was made a citizen solely by virtue of the generous provisions of the 1952 Immigration and Naturalization Act.

5 posted on 01/13/2016 7:47:58 AM PST by EternalVigilance ('A man without force is without the essential dignity of humanity.' - Frederick Douglass)
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To: SeekAndFind

That sure is a mass of outside reference. What does the constitution say on its face? It defines citizen. If Cruz gets over that hurdle, continue to see if his citizenship is natural born or naturalized.


6 posted on 01/13/2016 7:49:14 AM PST by Cboldt
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To: SubMareener

” Cable Act, passed in 1922”

An act that reversed a terrible previous law that stripped a women of her citizenship for marrying a foreign man.

It had nothing to do with children.


7 posted on 01/13/2016 7:50:55 AM PST by CodeToad (Islam should be banned and treated as a criminal enterprise!)
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To: RummyChick

The phrase in the 1790 Act was “considered as a natural born citizen.” In other words, ‘as if they were natural born.’ The phrase takes four words to say the exact same thing is expressed by the one word: “naturalized.” It doesn’t mean that they actually WERE natural born. It’s that they will be treated that way by the statute.

And of course, mere statute cannot amend the Constitution.


8 posted on 01/13/2016 7:52:11 AM PST by EternalVigilance ('A man without force is without the essential dignity of humanity.' - Frederick Douglass)
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To: SubMareener

Not much credibility to this piece by completely ignoring the fact that even if you considered “offspring” born abroad to be natural born, it was through the father, and Cruz’s father was unquestionably not a U.S. citizen at the time of his birth. Even if you wanted to update it to delete the sexism of that, you would have to expand it to both parents, because having it be either/or mother/father would open up the possibility of a natural born citizen having divided loyalties, which is exactly the thing they sought to prevent with this provision.


9 posted on 01/13/2016 7:52:13 AM PST by Behind the Blue Wall
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To: RummyChick

Back when schools taught kids, we learned you had to be born on US soil. Common sense why this is important.

All the minutia of why this simple idea doesn’t apply to Cruz, or Obama, or millions of other foreign born who had a former US citizen parent, is the kind of insane political double speak that we are sick and tired of.

And sure, the hard Cruz supporters don’t care, but this crap isn’t exactly helping his alleged “outsider” facade.


10 posted on 01/13/2016 8:03:23 AM PST by moehoward
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To: SeekAndFind
I don't recall all these bid and bad Cruz skeptics/Constitutional scholars saying squat when it really mattered back in either 2008 or 2012. You all folded like cheap card-tables when the Left came up with that absurd "Birther" trope. And so, in the immortal words of Archie Bunker to Edith (whenever she uttered anything especially vapid) I say: "Stifle!
11 posted on 01/13/2016 8:04:54 AM PST by Trentamj
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To: CodeToad

Yes, I see your point. Also, under the Cable Act of 1922, Ted’s mother would have lost her American citizenship after two years in Canada.


12 posted on 01/13/2016 8:27:19 AM PST by SubMareener (Save us from Quarterly Freepathons! Become a MONTHLY DONOR!)
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To: SubMareener
You must ask your self

Will the DNC go after Cruz legally?

13 posted on 01/13/2016 8:30:13 AM PST by scooby321
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To: SeekAndFind
If Cruz's parents had not been married when he was born, then his natural born status would not be in question--because his mother was a US citizen. Should his status be worse because he was born to married parents?

Back in 1790, the legal system was much more patriarchal than it is now--married women were more or less like children in the eyes of the law. So the father's status carried more weight than the mother's. The law changing that in the 1920s came after the amendment that gave women the right to vote, when social and legal attitudes had changed.

Sen. McCain was on one of the morning shows yesterday and falsely asserted that he himself had been born in the Panama Canal Zone, rather than in Panama proper.

14 posted on 01/13/2016 8:46:46 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: SeekAndFind
If Cruz's parents had not been married when he was born, then his natural born status would not be in question--because his mother was a US citizen. Should his status be worse because he was born to married parents?

Back in 1790, the legal system was much more patriarchal than it is now--married women were more or less like children in the eyes of the law. So the father's status carried more weight than the mother's. The law changing that in the 1920s came after the amendment that gave women the right to vote, when social and legal attitudes had changed.

Sen. McCain was on one of the morning shows yesterday and falsely asserted that he himself had been born in the Panama Canal Zone, rather than in Panama proper.

15 posted on 01/13/2016 8:46:47 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: EternalVigilance

RE: Senator Cruz was made a citizen solely by virtue of the generous provisions of the 1952 Immigration and Naturalization Act.

If a law has been passed before one is born and is in force when one was born, does meeting the generous provisions of that law at birth make one a natural born citizen?

Or does the original intent of the constitution in regards to what they meant by “natural-born” SUPERCEDE the law that was passed long after that?


16 posted on 01/13/2016 8:49:49 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
The real question is how many other times do liberals give a dog's left hind leg about what the Constitution, the founders or Blackstone thought? That alone should raise red flags you can see from Cuba and Canada. They didn't care about the first amendment, the second amendment, the commerce clause, and separation of powers to name a few. Now the set themselves up as the experts to speak from Sinai on what the founders thought; give me a break.
17 posted on 01/13/2016 9:09:47 AM PST by Idaho_Cowboy (Ride for the Brand. Joshua 24:15)
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To: DiogenesLamp

Wasn’t John McCain born in Panama? My DIL born in Italy to an American service couple is a citizen. What’s this all about except dirty politics?


18 posted on 01/13/2016 10:27:17 AM PST by R Rogers
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To: SeekAndFind

The Constitution is the supreme law of the land. No mere statute attains that rank.


19 posted on 01/13/2016 11:41:54 AM PST by EternalVigilance ('A man without force is without the essential dignity of humanity.' - Frederick Douglass)
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To: SeekAndFind

ping


20 posted on 01/13/2016 2:28:23 PM PST by John Valentine (Deep in the Heart of Texas)
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