Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Obama’s Eligibility: The Final
Word
by Paul R. Hollrah
February 14, 2014
In
recent days I have been drawn into yet another debate over presidential
eligibility, as specified in Article II, Section 1 of the U.S.
Constitution. Given that Barack Obama
has occupied the Oval Office illegally for more than five years, without so
much as a whimper of protest from most American voters or the mainstream media,
some may feel that any further discussion of this matter may be akin to
“beating a dead horse.”
Nevertheless,
if we insist on referring to ourselves as a constitutional republic, and if we
continue to insist that we honor constitutional principles and the rule of law,
then we have no choice but to understand precisely what the Founders intended
when they drafted our governing document in 1787.
What
generated my recent exchange on the subject of presidential eligibility was an
article in the January 31, 2014 edition of pegAlert,
the newsletter of the Pennsylvania Business Council. The article in question was titled, “SANTORUM
PREPPING FOR ANOTHER RUN IN 2016.”
In
response, I asked the question, “Who keeps
propping up Santorum’s ambitions... other than Rick Santorum? Unless I’m
wrong, his father was still an Italian citizen when he was born. That
makes him ineligible for the presidency.”
To which a representative of the Business Council replied, “That might
be so, but Santorum was born in the USA so that makes him a citizen.”
To that nonsensical assertion I
replied, “… If Santorum was born in the US, which I
assume he was, that does make him a ‘citizen.’ But that’s not what is at
issue. What is at issue is his status as a ‘natural born’ citizen, which
he must be if he wants to run for president. In order for him to be a
‘natural born’ citizen, both of his parents must have been US citizens.
If Santorum’s father was still an Italian citizen when he was born, then he is
not a ‘natural born’ citizen…”
The final response from the Pennsylvania
Business Council brought us straight to the nub of the issue. The reply read, “Under (that)
definition, none of our initial 6 or 7 presidents, would have qualified.” Bingo!!
Without even trying, he inadvertently proved my point.
Once again I found myself confronted face-to-face with the
harebrained notion that the terms “citizen” and “natural born Citizen” are
synonymous… that to be a “citizen” equates to being a “natural born” citizen. That simply is not true. One would think that simple intellectual
curiosity would lead those who share that mistaken belief to question why the
Founders found it necessary to modify the phrase, “No person except a natural born Citizen,” with the phrase, “… or a Citizen of the United States, at the
time of the Adoption of this Constitution…”
Even the most unthinking and uneducated among us must agree
that the use of the word “or”
requires an implicit understanding that those who would seek
the presidency had to be either
“natural born citizens,” or “citizens of the United States” on the
day that the Constitution became the law of the land.
On the day that the Declaration of Independence was signed
on July 4, 1776, every citizen of the thirteen original colonies became
citizens of a new nation, the United States of America. And the very first child born to newly-minted
US citizens on July 4, 1776, before the ink was dry on John Hancock’s
signature, became the nation’s very first “natural born” citizen.
The Constitution required that, in addition to being a
resident of the United States for at least fourteen years, those who would seek
the presidency must be at least thirty-five years of age. There were a great many men who met those two
criteria, but the country needed a president and the only “natural born”
citizens available on June 21, 1788, the day the Constitution was ratified,
were children under twelve years of age.
To solve that problem, the Framers added a
grandfather clause, making it possible for newly-minted US citizens, none of
them “natural born,” to serve as president.
This was necessary until such time as a body of individuals, born to US
citizen parents after the Declaration
of Independence, reached age thirty-five.
George Washington, our first
president, was born at Wakefield, Virginia on February 22, 1732, forty-four
years before the Declaration of
Independence. He was a “citizen,” but
not a “natural born” citizen because both of his parents were British subjects
at the time of his birth.
John Adams, our second president,
was born at Braintree, Massachusetts on October 30, 1735, forty-one years before the Declaration of
Independence. He was a “citizen” because
he was born in Massachusetts, but he was not a “natural born” citizen because
both of his parents were British subjects at the time of his birth and owed
their allegiance to the British crown.
Thomas Jefferson, our third
president, was born at Shadwell, Virginia on April 13, 1743, thirty-three years
before the Declaration of
Independence. He was a “citizen” because
he was born in Virginia, but he was not a “natural born” citizen because both
of his parents were British subjects at the time of his birth.
James Madison, our fourth
president, born in Virginia on March 16, 1751, twenty-five years before the Declaration of Independence;
James Monroe, our fifth president, born in Virginia on April 28, 1758, eighteen
years before the Declaration of
Independence; John Quincy Adams, our sixth president, born in Massachusetts on
July 11, 1767, nine years before the
Declaration of Independence; and Andrew Jackson, our seventh president, born in
South Carolina on March 15, 1767, nine years before the Declaration of Independence; were all “citizens” because
they were born in what came to be the United States of America, but they were
not “natural born” citizens because their parents were not US citizens at the
time of their birth.
However, Martin Van Buren, our
eighth president, was born at Kinderhook, New York on December 5, 1782, six
years and five months after the
Declaration of Independence. Unlike his
seven predecessors, he was not just a “citizen,” he was a “natural born”
citizen… the first president, at least thirty-five years of age, who was born
to US citizen parents after the signing of the Declaration of
Independence.
What a great many patriotic, but
ill-informed, Americas refuse to accept is the fact that, while the Founders intended that only “natural born” citizens should
ever serve as president, there were no 35-year-old “natural born” citizens
available during the first 35 years of our nation’s history. Accordingly, it
became necessary to provide an exemption
of limited duration covering those citizens born prior to July 4,
1776. All were “grandfathered” and made
eligible under the phrase, “or a Citizen
of the United States, at the time of the
Adoption of this Constitution…”
Every U.S. president since Van Buren… with
the exception of Chester A. Arthur, whose Irish father was a British subject at
the time of his birth, and Barack Obama, whose Kenyan father was also a British
subject at the time of his birth… has been a “natural born” U.S. citizen, as
required by Article II, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution.
Barack Obama was born with dual US-British
citizenship “by descent” from his Kenyan father and his American mother. However, under Chapter VI, Sec. 97(1) of the
Kenyan Constitution of December 12, 1963, Kenyan Independence Day, Obama lost
his British citizenship on August 4, 1984, his twenty-third birthday. However, his eligibility status is now
complicated by the fact that, under Chapter 3, Section 14 of a revised Kenyan
Constitution, adopted on August 4, 2010, he became a citizen of Kenya “by
birth” and is required to obey the laws of Kenya, should he ever set foot in
that country during or after his stay in the White House.
The Framers found it inconceivable that a
president of the United States, commander in chief of the Army and the Navy,
should ever be required to obey the laws of a foreign nation. Barack Obama provides, if nothing else, a
definitive example of why the Founders insisted that the president must be a
“natural born” citizen, untainted by any hint of foreign allegiances.
Although Democrats have successfully
defended Obama’s illegal presidency, based largely on the fact that he is a
black man, insulated from the rule of law by the color of his skin, we must
insist that constitutional mandates apply equally to presidents of both
parties, Democrats and Republicans. This
means, of course, that conservatives such as Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), Gov. Nicki
Haley (R-SC), Gov. Bobby Jindal (R-LA), Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), and former
Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA)… all born to one or more non-US citizen parents… are
not natural born citizens and must be eliminated from consideration for the
2016 GOP nomination.
In the days of Washington, Adams, and
Jefferson, a man of Barack Obama’s background and qualifications would have
received zero consideration for the presidency.
Without question, he would have been declared ineligible. Yet, in spite of the fact that the
Constitutional criteria for the presidency have not changed one iota since
1787, millions of Americans today insist that he is eligible for the office. By what tortured reasoning, what conceivable
standard, they won’t say.
Liberals and Democrats being what they
are, we can always count on them to expect to have things both ways. But conservatives and Republicans believe in
constitutional principles and the rule of law and we simply cannot allow the
bandwagon-riders in our party to circumvent the Constitution. So, sorry, Ted, Nicki, Bobby, Marco, and
Rick… we love you all and you’re a great credit to our country, but you just
can’t play in our presidential sandbox.
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