Obama qualified for the ballot in all fifty states plus the District of Columbia. Over two election cycles, that’s 102 qualifications. His Electoral votes were unanimously confirmed by both Houses of Congress, without objection.
There have been 226 original jurisdiction legal challenges to his qualifications, 97 state and federal appellate rulings and 26 appeals to the Supreme Court of the United States. There has been no ruling of ineligibility.
Obama placed a copy of his official state of Hawaii birth certificate on the Internet for the whole wide world to see on June 12, 2008. He followed that up with placing on the Internet a copy of his original, long form birth certificate on April 27, 2011.
The state of Hawaii said: “The Hawai’i State Health Department recently complied with a request by President Barack Obama for certified copies of his original Certificate of Live Birth, which is sometimes referred to in the media as a long form birth certificate.
‘We hope that issuing certified copies of the original Certificate of Live Birth to President Obama will end the numerous inquiries related to his birth in Hawai’i,
There have been 21 judicial rulings finding Obama qualifies as a natural born citizen and no ruling has ever found that he does not qualify as such.
For example: Taitz v. Obama (Quo Warranto) This is one of several such suits filed by Ms. Taitz in her quixotic attempt to prove that President Obama is not a natural born citizen, as is required by the Constitution. This Court is not willing to go tilting at windmills with her.— Chief U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, April 14, 2010
A Writ of Quo Warranto requires an elected or appointed official to prove by what authority they hold the position that they have. Quo warranto shifts the burden of proof to the elected or appointed official.
If anyone still has questions about his eligibility, his birth certificate can be inspected under an order from a judge of a court of competent jurisdiction or by a congressional subpoena. Furthermore officials of the state of Hawaii can be deposed under oath and subpoenaed to testify before courts or Congress, under oath, at any time.