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In Jimmy's world, no republican is "nice".
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This was a reply to Kut2k2 in another thread regarding this subject
http://www.elitetrader.com/et/index...-is-a-child-abuser.297007/page-4#post-4230852
"Means nothing. Cruz was naturalized at birth. That doesn't mean he was natural born. No law by Congress can settle this matter. Only the federal judiciary can settle this matter. "
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The article references a SCOTUS ruling pertaining to similar circumstances, Rogers v. Bellei, (401 U.S. 815)
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/401/815/case.html
Bellei, born and lived aboard to an Italian father and US mother, originally had his citizenship revoked. He argued that his "native-born" citizenship was granted to him since birth via his mother, and he was not naturalized and dependent upon State criteria to retain citizenship. SCOTUS ruled in his favor.
Yes , I understand why there are people who would like to have Cruz disqualified..... By all means take it to court, but you'll be waisting your time.... This is an attempt to slow Cruz's campaign and nothing more.
My Bad, in reading..... Must have been part of the lower courts interpretation being overturned by SCOTUS, actually being part of Bellei's argument found not applicableThis is incorrect. The Supreme Court did not rule in Bellei's favor. It upheld the provision in the Naturalization Act that required him to spend a certain amount of time in the uS to retain his citizenship.
The Court stated: " A contrary holding would convert what is congressional generosity into something unanticipated and obviously undesired by the Congress. Our National Legislature indulged the foreign-born child with presumptive citizenship, subject to subsequent satisfaction of a reasonable residence requirement, rather than to deny him citizenship outright, as concededly it had the power to do, and relegate the child, if he desired American citizenship, to the more arduous requirements of the usual naturalization process. The plaintiff here would force the Congress to choose between unconditional conferment of United States citizenship at birth and deferment of citizenship until a condition precedent is fulfilled. We are not convinced that the Constitution requires so rigid a choice. If it does, the congressional response seems obvious."