A Response to the
Idea of Removing the Natural Born Citizen Clause From Our Constitution
By Mario Apuzzo, Esq.
May 17, 2018
University of Richmond School of Law Professor Kevin C.
Walsh proposes ridding our Constitution of its “natural born Citizen” clause. See his article, “The ‘Irish Born’ One American
Citizenship Amendment,” here https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3165238
. Professor Walsh writes that the original Constitution is not perfect and it
is time to change its actual text. In
that connection, he advocates that naturalized American citizens should be
eligible to be President. He states: “There
are not two classes of American citizenship, just one. It is time to repeal the
Natural Born Citizen Clause.” People
have posted comments to his article and Professor Walsh addresses them here
https://reason.com/volokh/2018/05/17/replies-to-comments-on-a-constitutional
and here http://beforeitsnews.com/libertarian/2018/05/replies-to-comments-on-a-constitutional-amendment-to-repeal-the-natural-born-citizen-clause-2712011.html
. I have picked two of the questions and Professor Walsh’s responses for my own comment.
They are:
1. Question: If very few people care much about this
amendment, why would anyone sponsor it?
Professor Walsh’s response:
Putting aside the fact that it is good for America generally, uses
include: (1) deflection of false “anti-immigrant” accusations based on a
lawmaker’s stance against illegal immigration; (2) attraction of votes from
naturalized citizens and their friends; (3) rejection of “blood and soil”
nationalism.
My comment: We are
supposed to believe without any explanation that this amendment would be “good
for America generally.” To avoid “’anti-immigrant’
accusations,” we are told we need to change our presidential eligibility by
getting rid of the natural born citizen clause, a clause that the Framers
included in the Constitution for national security’s sake. We are also told to change our presidential
eligibility so that some unstated person or party can garner more votes at the
polls. And the best of all, Professor Walsh
tells us that removing the natural born citizen clause will get rid of “’blood
and soil’ nationalism” from American politics.
In his actual article, he calls it “’blood and soil’ white nationalism.” In that article he also says that politicians
should be amendable to advocating getting rid of the natural born citizen
clause to give the appearance of not being anti-immigrant(“easy inoculation against
the virulent accusation of being anti-immigrant”) and not being associated with
people who advocate such a bad idea. His
plan for getting the amendment accomplished is for Democrats to set up
Republicans to do the job for them. His scheme
is for two-thirds of both Houses of Congress to propose the amendment, led by
Republicans who for the sake of winning elections should want to give voters
the appearance that they are not anti-immigrant or racists and supported by
Democrats who are already on board. It
looks like in Professor Walsh’s world, there should be no problem with “Russian
collusion.” Did it ever occur to Professor Walsh that blood and soil is what makes a nation state and that it is the
energy which when used properly keeps people free?
2. Question: What about competing loyalties to country of
birth for a candidate who is a naturalized citizen?
Professor Walsh’s response: Let’s remember we’re only
talking about eligibility. Presumably voters can decide about allegiance. And
there’s no good reason to treat circumstances of birth as a reliable proxy.
(The Manchurian Candidate was born in the United States.) With respect to
competing loyalties more generally, the naturalization process requires a
choice and newly naturalized Americans are akin to converts.
My comment: What Professor
Walsh does not address is the question of whether it is voters or parties who produce
our elected leaders. He should examine
why the Framers guaranteed the States a republican form of government and gave
us the Electoral College as part of the process for electing our President and
Commander in Chief. If voters without
more can in the heat and partisanship of an election be trusted to make the
right decision about who shall be the single person to wield not only the
executive power, but also all our military power, then why even have a
Constitution or even laws? Will Professor
Walsh next be advocating getting rid of our republican form of government and replace
it with mob rule? He states that
citizenship is no guarantee of allegiance.
If the natural born citizen clause is to die because it is not a guarantee
of loyalty, then why have the age and residency eligibility requirements or any
requirements for that matter? Finally,
he tells us that a naturalized person is as loyal as a natural born citizen because
naturalization requires “a choice.” What
he fails to tell us is what exactly is that choice and how does it relate to
allegiance to the United States.
Needless to say, I am not impressed with the reasons that Professor Walsh puts forth for justifying his proposal to remove the natural born
citizen clause from presidential eligibility and ultimately from the
Constitution. The Framers inserted the clause into the Constitution to assure that
the constitutional republic would be preserved by requiring that the nation be
led in international relations and military combat by a person who had undivided
allegiance and loyalty to the United States. For those reasons, the clause is
worth preserving.
While I am at it, I might as well again state what my
position is on the meaning of an Article II natural born citizen. My years of research and litigation in the
courts have led me to the conclusion that the definition of a natural born
citizen comes from natural law and that under that law, which was codified into
the law of nations, a natural born citizen is a child who becomes a member of
society (“citizen”) at birth by virtue of his or her birth circumstances alone
and therefore needs no positive law to make or deem him or her a citizen. American common law at the time of the framing
of the Constitution reflected this natural law and law of nations understanding. See Emer de Vattel, The Law of Nations, Section 212 (1758) (1797) ("The citizens
are the members of the civil society: bound to this society by certain duties,
and subject to its authority, they equally participate in its advantages. The
natives, or natural-born citizens, are those born in the country, of parents
who are citizens"); Minor v.
Happersett, 88 U.S. 162 (1875) ("all children born in a country of
parents who were its citizens became. . . natives, or natural-born
citizens"); accord U.S. v. Wong Kim
Ark, 169 U.S. 649 (1898) ("The child of an alien, if born in the
country, is as much a citizen as the natural born child of a citizen, and by
operation of the same principle").
Hence, there are two necessary and sufficient elements in
the definition of a natural born citizen under the common law with which the
Framers were familiar when they drafted the Constitution and therefore under
the Constitution, i.e., (1) birth or reputed birth in the country (2) to
parents who were both U.S. citizens at the time of the child's birth. Again, these elements are both necessary and
sufficient to make a natural born citizen (place of birth alone is necessary
but not sufficient). Satisfying just one
of the elements will not be sufficient for producing a natural born
citizen. This definition is enshrined in
the Constitution. While the 14th
Amendment could have changed this definition, it did not. Nor can any Act of Congress supplant it. Scholars and professors who have been publishing
papers on the meaning of a natural born citizen argue whether place of birth or
parentage is necessary or sufficient to make one a natural born subject. They fail to understand that these two
elements are both necessary and sufficient to make one a natural born citizen.
One other
point merits discussion. New Jersey Administrative
Law Judge Jeff Masin, in my latest New Jersey ballot challenges against
Senator Ted Cruz, found in 2016 that English and U.S. naturalization Acts were
incorporated into and became part of English and therefore U.S. common law and
that therefore under that “common law,” a child born out of the United States
to two or even one U.S. citizen parent is a natural born citizen. "The
more persuasive legal analysis is that such a child, born of a citizen-father,
citizen-mother, or both, is indeed a 'natural born citizen' within the
contemplation of the Constitution," ALJ Masin wrote. The full decision can
be read here: https://www.scribd.com/doc/308269472/NJ-Judge-Advisory-Opinion-Rules-Canadian-Born-Cruz-Eligible-To-Be-President-4-12-2016. Reduced, this means that he concluded that
birth to one U.S. citizen parent, no matter where that child may be born in the
world, is sufficient to make one a natural born citizen. I objected to this position and holding, arguing that if it
were correct that American common law had been so transformed by such statutes
and such common law formed the basis of the constitutional definition of a
natural born citizen, then all of Congress’s naturalization Acts since the
beginning of our nation have been unconstitutional and the U.S. Supreme Court, which
has ruled on the meaning of U.S. citizenship and interpreted those Acts throughout
the centuries, has gotten it wrong. The Supreme Court ruled in 1967 in Afroyim v. Rusk, 387 U.S. 253 (1967) that the government can expatriate
an American citizen only after he or she commits a voluntary act that demonstrates
an intent to renounce his or her U.S. citizenship. The Court said: “We hold
that the Fourteenth Amendment was designed to, and does, protect every citizen
of this Nation against a congressional forcible destruction of his citizenship,
whatever his creed, color, or race. Our holding does no more than to give to
this citizen that which is his own, a constitutional right to remain a citizen
in a free country unless he voluntarily relinquishes that citizenship.” Id. at 268. If the Fourteenth Amendment has such power
which I agree it does, then, if ALJ Masin is correct, it, along with the Fifth
Amendment, can also be used as a basis for arguing that Congress has since the
beginning of our nation violated the Constitution by not recognizing the
natural born citizen status of all children born out of the United States to
one or two U.S. citizen parents. Neither
ALJ Masin nor the New Jersey Appellate Division addressed my observation and objection.
The debate on the meaning of a natural born citizen
continues. It will not end until the
U.S. Supreme Court rules on the merits of the meaning of the clause. In the meantime, we should keep the natural born citizen clause right where it is, in our Constitution.
Mario Apuzzo, Esq.
May 17, 2018
http://puzo1.blogspot.com
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Mario Apuzzo, Esq.
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