The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
McCain's citizenship called into question
By Pete Williams
NBC
© February 29, 2008
Candidate, born in Panama Canal Zone, may not
qualify as 'natural born'
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and his advisers are doing
their best to brush aside questions — raised in the
liberal blogosphere — about whether he is qualified
under the Constitution to be president. But many legal
scholars and government lawyers say it's a serious
question with no clear answer.
The problem arises from a phrase in the Constitution
setting out who is eligible to be president. Article
II, which also specifies that a person must be at least
35 years old, says "No person except a natural born
Citizen" can be president.
Sen. McCain is undoubtedly a citizen. He was born on Aug.
29, 1936, in the Panama Canal Zone, and Congress has
specifically provided that anyone born there of U.S.
parents, as he was, is a citizen. Indeed, the general
rule is that anyone born of U.S. parents outside the
United States is a citizen.
But is John McCain a natural born citizen? The Constitution
does not define the term further, and legal scholars say
the notes of the Constitution's drafters shed little light
on what they meant. It seems clear only that the founders
wanted to make certain that whoever was president would
be loyal to the U.S. alone and not to some other country.
But the term "natural born citizen," many scholars say,
was not in common use at the time the Constitution was
written.
Sen. McCain's supporters draw some comfort from a law
passed in 1790 by the first Congress. It provided that
the children of US citizens born outside the US "shall
be considered as natural born citizens." The law is no
longer in effect, but it provides some guidance on what
the founders had in mind at the time of the Constitution.
And some legal experts find it hard to believe the
founders would have considered their own children, if
born overseas, to be ineligible for the presidency.
"If John and Abigail Adams were sent to France on a
diplomatic mission, I find it inconceivable that they
would have thought their children were not natural born
citizens," said Professor John Parry of Lewis and Clark
Law School.
Issue has come up before
This issue has been raised before in the presidential
campaigns of Barry Goldwater, born in Arizona territory
not the United States, and George Romney, born in Mexico.
But it was never resolved.
In 1964, the Supreme Court seemed to say, without deciding,
that "natural born" meant born inside the United States.
In an opinion on an unrelated issue, the court observed,
"The rights of citizenship of the native born and of the
naturalized person are of the same dignity and are
coextensive. The only difference drawn by the Constitution
is that only the 'natural born' citizen is eligible to be
President." But that language is not legally binding, and
the Supreme Court has never ruled on what "natural born"
means.
The ambiguity has stirred concern for decades. In 1987,
New York Times columnist William Safire suggested amending
the Constitution. "The 'natural born' phrase unfairly
burdens children of Americans born abroad ... because it
casts a shadow across any candidacy: if elected, the
President-elect would surely face a challenge on the
born-abroad impediment," he wrote.
Sen. McCain has the support of Ted Olson, the former U.S.
solicitor general. "The plain meaning of 'natural born
citizen' includes persons who become citizens of this nation
'naturally,' that is, by virtue of their birth to parents
who are citizens, particularly when the birth takes place
on territory occupied and controlled by the United States,
in Senator McCain's case, a U.S. military base in the Panama
Canal Zone," Olson says in a statement. But that is by no
means a universally held view.
U.S. 'never had sovereignty' over Canal Zone
Besides, many legal scholars say the Canal Zone never
was sovereign U.S. territory. In a February 1978 speech
to the nation on the Panama Canal Treaty, heavily vetted
by government lawyers, President Carter said, "We have
never had sovereignty over it. We have only had the right
to use it. The US Supreme Court and previous American
presidents have repeatedly acknowledged the sovereignty
of Panama over the Canal Zone."
It's not clear, either, who would have the legal right to sue
if McCain were elected president. One expert on federal
procedure said any taxpayer aggrieved by an action of a
President McCain would have standing to challenge his
qualifications.
Legal scholars generally agree on one thing, however. If this
issue did produce a legal challenge, the courts would be very
reluctant to invalidate the results of an election, especially
given such an uncertain legal landscape.
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Last Modified:
October 21, 2008