Still waiting for any liberal to explain why this is a bad thing?
AZ âBirtherâ Bill Passes Senate â Requires Presidential Candidates to Show Proof of Citizenship
Posted by Jim Hoft on Friday, April 15, 2011, 10:14 AM
If Barack Obama wants to be included on the ballot in Arizona in 2012 he will have to show proof of citizenship. The Arizona senate passed their âbirtherâ bill last night. The bill will now be sent to Republican Governor Jan Brewer who will sign it into law.
AZ Central reported:
AZ âBirtherâ Bill Passes Senate â Requires Presidential Candidates to Show Proof of Citizenship
Posted by Jim Hoft on Friday, April 15, 2011, 10:14 AM
If Barack Obama wants to be included on the ballot in Arizona in 2012 he will have to show proof of citizenship. The Arizona senate passed their âbirtherâ bill last night. The bill will now be sent to Republican Governor Jan Brewer who will sign it into law.
AZ Central reported:
The Arizona Legislature has become the first in the nation to pass a measure requiring presidential candidates to provide proof of citizenship in order to get on the stateâs ballot.
House Bill 2177 got final approval Thursday night from the House. It will be transmitted to Gov. Jan Brewer, who will then have five days to sign it, veto it or do nothing and allow it to become law.
If Brewer chooses to veto the bill, Republican lawmakers could attempt an override vote. The bill would become law if two-thirds of legislators supported the override.
âItâs essential that we bring back the integrity to the office,â Rep. Judy Burges, R-Skull Valley, said during a recent debate on one of the so-called âbirtherâ measures.
HB 2177, sponsored by Rep. Carl Seel, R-Phoenix, would require presidential and vice presidential candidates to provide the Arizona secretary of state with documents proving they are natural-born citizens.
Those documents can be either a long-form birth certificate or two or more other permitted documents, including an early baptismal certificate, circumcision certificate, hospital birth record, postpartum medical record signed by the person who delivered the child or an early census record.
