Posted on 10/29/2013 9:02:51 AM PDT by txrangerette
Cruz said in an interview with Fusion that because his mother is an American citizen he is a citizen as well.
"I was a U.S. Citizen by birth and beyond that I'm going to leave it to others to worry about...legal consequences", he said.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
You are handing us a Federal Law in an effort to settle a Constitutional issue?
If a Federal Law bans rifles and shotguns, does this mean that the 2nd amendment has been effectively repealed?
Please explain to me how a Federal law "tail" can wag a constitutional dog?
Really?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3084995/replies?c=695
We must have two different versions of FR. ;-)
Firstly, Natural born citizens do not have to meet requirements created by federal law. They have to meet requirements created by nature.
Secondly, Article II is not subject to federal requirements. Congress simply cannot pass a law and thereby change it's meaning.
Thank you. Well stated.
Since he mentions dropping the Canadian at that time, and doesnt mention the Cuban
at all, then it seems reasonable again to assume he had already dropped the Cuban.
**************
I don’t think he could have had Cuban Citizenship as the Cuban Constitution of 1940
which was in force at the time of Ted’s birth prohibits dual citizenship.
http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/constitution/title2.htm
ART. 15. The following lose Cuban citizenship:
1st. Those who acquire a foreign citizenship.
Children of immigrants do not have to go through a naturalization process. Only adults do that.
Because children of immigrants do not have to go through a naturalization process, does this make them natural born citizens?
You make a great point as well.
I work for a US based company that is a fully owned subsidiary of a UK based company.
Just last week I traveled to the UK for a meeting at our corporate headquarters in the UK. I spent nearly a week over there.
What if I was a US citizen, living in and working full time for this company in the US, but was pregnant and during my one week trip to the UK, and I went into premature labor and delivered my child in the UK. Would my child be a UK or a US citizen? Of course my child would be a US citizen, and a natural born citizen even though not technically born on US soil. The child would not have or be entitled to UK citizenship.
I think there are some legal provisions that say I would have to contact the local US Consulate to register the birth and obtain all the necessary documents to re-enter the US with the child and obtain a US birth certificate, but from what I understand, this is rather routine with US citizens, US service members and diplomatic personnel, US citizens working and even temporarily living overseas on business.
Not worth the time or effort. Republican sealed records do not stay sealed. Ever.
So how DO we know what the Founding Fathers meant?
If having one’s case appear in a statute is “citizen by operation of statute”, then all of us are such, even those born in the USA to 2 citizen parents. ALL appear in the law.
So, the advantage of those born in the USA is really the 14th amendment that specifically says that anyone born in the USA is a citizen. (Even it doesn’t use the term ‘natural born citizen’.)
“Natural born citizen” is no place defined in US law with the only exception being the Naturalization Law of 1790.
If your brother was elected President his opponent could file suit challenging his eligibility and ACCORDING TO THE STATE DEPARTMENT’S DOCUMENT describing citizenship laws, the court could rule him non-eligible.
That’s not legal limbo?
This is exactly correct. US Law cannot change the meaning, nor set additional requirements, nor can it remove any existing requirements.
Federal law cannot modify the meaning of a constitutional term.
But somehow, in a legal sense, Senator Cruz is to be held accountable, in terms of his LEGAL eligibility to be President, by something outside of US Law?
Do not understand what you are trying to say here.
Also - tell me more about how TX was able to require Eisenhower to provide a birth certificate in order to get on the TX ballot. Did the law at the time say that the SOS was authorized to demand a BC?
The dissent disagreed (obviously, heh) and said that statutory citizens are essentially naturalized and so are 14A citizens and cannot have their citizenship revoked without their consent - meaning they believed that retention requirements were unconstitutional.
The majority said that statutory citizens are not naturalized "in" the U.S. because Congress didn't force them to go through the arduous naturalization process even though it had the power to make them do so.
I agree that, today, the court would not allow Congress to revoke Cruz' citizenship.
Regarding whether or not the Constitution specifies jus soli or jus sanguinis, the FAM says that the Constitution does not recognize jus sanguinis. (If it did, there would be no need for statutes granting citizenship at birth.):
b. Section 104(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1104 (a) gives the Secretary of State the responsibility for administration and enforcement of all nationality laws related to "the determination of nationality of a person not in the United States."
1. Jus soli (the law of the soil) - a rule of common law under which the place of a person's birth determines citizenship. In addition to common law, this principle is embodied in the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and various U.S. citizenship and nationality statutes.2. Jus sanguinis (the law of the bloodline) - a concept of Roman or civil law under which a person's citizenship is determined by the citizenship of one or both parents. This rule, frequently called "citizenship by descent" or "derivative citizenship", is not embodied in the U.S. Constitution, but such citizenship is granted through statute. As U.S. laws have changed, the requirements for conferring and retaining derivative citizenship have also changed.
I would say that the fact of your brother being involved, excludes you from being reachable by any logical or factual argument.
What sort of man would agree to any perceived de-legitimizing of his brother? No matter what the argument?
With all the talk about what Congress and the courts can and can’t do with a person’s citizenship, or what they can and can’t decide or legislate.... I think anybody who believes anything with Ted Cruz is airtight is smoking something powerful.
Why don’t we try to do something to make the rules clear and legally airtight? At this point I don’t even really care what the rules end up being, but all this wiggle room becomes worrisome when you realize that our courts and Congress are having all their communications read by a communist-run NSA... and the media creates alternate realities every hour of every day and it gets swallowed up by the general public.
Why in the world would anybody not want these questions LEGALLY settled now? Why in the world would anybody accept the idea that all of us whose safety and rights are bound up in the only political processes we are able to participate in still have no standing to at least KNOW THE RULES OF WHO WE CAN CHOOSE TO BE IN THE WHITE HOUSE? Why would anybody want to trust a supposedly oral “understanding” of a contract when they could have a written one that really is legally binding?
You are still tripping over the obvious.
So, to define who needs to be naturalized one MUST define who does not need to be naturalized, ie., those who are already natural.
The one thing is not a subset of the other. As I have pointed out before, NO children of Naturalized immigrants have a naturalization ceremony. Does this make them non-naturalized?
The absence of a ceremony or a certificate does not make them a "natural" citizen.
Nope, this says what I've explained, with the exception that US should probably read Canadian right before the "otherwise". Read the "otherwise" section again. It is possible I meant that doing the one at that time meant he would have also renounced the other, but it's more likely I meant the US to read Canadian. The "otherwise" sentence makes clear what I was saying.
I'm not saying it couldn't have been better written, but I think it's pretty clear.
I agree with you about both Cruz Senior and Junior, but my sentence you quoted dealt with Cruz Senior, iirc.
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