Couldn't be a matter of skin color, could it?
Very interesting. A point brought up by a law professor. Skin
color still matters in the good old USA.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/11/us/politics/11mccain.html
A Hint of New Life to a McCain Birth Issue
Published: July 11, 2008
In the most detailed examination yet of Senator John McCain’s eligibility
to be president, a law professor at the University of Arizona has concluded that
neither Mr. McCain’s birth in 1936 in the Panama Canal Zone nor the fact that
his parents were American citizens is enough to satisfy the constitutional
requirement that the president must be a “natural-born citizen.”
The analysis, by Prof. Gabriel J. Chin, focused on a 1937 law that has been
largely overlooked in the debate over Mr. McCain’s eligibility to be
president. The law conferred citizenship on children of American parents born in
the Canal Zone after 1904, and it made John McCain a citizen just before his
first birthday. But the law came too late, Professor Chin argued, to make Mr.
McCain a natural-born citizen.
“It’s preposterous that a technicality like this can make a difference in
an advanced democracy,” Professor Chin said. “But this is the constitutional
text that we have.”
Several legal experts said that Professor Chin’s analysis was careful and
plausible. But they added that nothing was very likely to follow from it.
“No court will get close to it, and everyone else is on board, so there’s
a constitutional consensus, the merits of arguments such as this one aside,”
said Peter J. Spiro, an authority on the law of citizenship at Temple
University.
Mr. McCain has dismissed any suggestion that he does not meet the citizenship
test.
In April, the Senate approved a nonbinding resolution declaring that Mr.
McCain is eligible to be president. Its sponsors said the nation’s founders
would have never intended to deny the presidency to the offspring of military
personnel stationed out of the country.
There are, Professor Chin argued in his analysis, only two ways to become a
natural-born citizen. One, specified in the Constitution, is to be born in the
United States. The other way is to be covered by a law enacted by Congress at
the time of one’s birth.
Professor Chin wrote that simply being born in the Canal Zone did not satisfy
the 14th Amendment, which says that “all persons born or naturalized in the
United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the
United States.”
A series of early-20th-century decisions known as the Insular Cases, he
wrote, ruled that unincorporated territories acquired by the United States were
not part of the nation for constitutional purposes. The Insular Cases did not
directly address the Canal Zone. But the zone was generally considered an
unincorporated territory before it was returned to Panama in 1999, and some
people born in the Canal Zone when it was under American jurisdiction have been
deported from the United States or convicted of being here illegally.
The second way Mr. McCain could have, and ultimately did, become a citizen
was by statute, Professor Chin wrote. In Rogers v. Bellei in 1971, the Supreme
Court said Congress had broad authority to decide whether and when children born
to American citizens abroad are citizens.
At the time of Mr. McCain’s birth, the relevant law granted
citizenship to any child born to an American parent “out of the limits and
jurisdiction of the United States.” Professor Chin said the term “limits and
jurisdiction” left a crucial gap. The Canal Zone was beyond the limits of the
United States but not beyond its jurisdiction, and thus the law did not apply to
Mr. McCain.
In 1937, Congress addressed the problem, enacting a law that granted
citizenship to people born in the Canal Zone after 1904. That made Mr. McCain a
citizen, but not one who was naturally born, Professor Chin said, because the
citizenship was conferred after his birth.
In his paper and in an interview, Professor Chin, a registered Democrat, said
he had no political motive in raising the question.
In March, Laurence H. Tribe, a law professor at Harvard and an adviser to
Senator Barack Obama, prepared a memorandum on these questions with Theodore B.
Olson, a former solicitor general in the Bush administration. The memorandum
concluded that Mr. McCain is a natural-born citizen based on the place of his
birth, the citizenship of his parents and their service to the country.
In an interview on Thursday, Mr. Olson, whose firm represents Mr. McCain in
the New Hampshire lawsuit, said Congress could not have intended to leave the
gap described by Professor Chin. The 1937 law, Mr. Olson said, was not a fix but
a way to clarify what Congress had meant all along.
Professor Tribe agreed. Reading the “limits and jurisdiction” clause as
Professor Chin does, Professor Tribe said, “is to attribute a crazy design to
Congress” that “would create an irrational gap.”
Brian Rogers, a McCain spokesman, said the campaign concurred and was
confident Mr. McCain is eligible to serve.
In the motion to dismiss the New Hampshire suit, Mr. McCain’s lawyers said
an individual citizen like the plaintiff, a Nashua man named Fred Hollander,
lacks proof of direct injury and cannot sue.
Daniel P. Tokaji, an election law expert at Ohio State University, agreed.
“It is awfully unlikely that a federal court would say that an individual
voter has standing,” he said. “It is questionable whether anyone would have
standing to raise that claim. You’d have to think a federal court would look
for every possible way to avoid deciding the issue.”