Reuters: Finally, there is definitive proof: The presidential candidate was born in the United States, and his father was not.
Yes,
Republican Mitt Romney appears eligible to be president, according to a
copy of Romney's birth certificate released to Reuters by his campaign.
Willard Mitt Romney, the certificate says, was born in Detroit on March
12, 1947.
His
mother, Lenore, was born in Utah and his father, former Michigan
governor and one-time Republican presidential candidate George Romney,
was born in Mexico.
So
on a day when real estate and media mogul Donald Trump was trying to
help Mitt Romney by stirring up a new round of questions about whether
Democratic President Barack Obama was born in the United States,
Romney's own birth record became a reminder that in the 1968
presidential campaign, his father had faced his own "birther"
controversy.
Back
then, George Romney - who died in 1995 - was a moderate who was
challenging eventual President Richard Nixon in the Republican
primaries.
With Texas win, Romney secures delegates to win nomination
Records
in a George Romney archive at the University of Michigan describe how
questions about his eligibility to be president surfaced almost as soon
as he began his short-lived campaign.
In
many ways, they appear to echo today's complaints that Trump and some
other conservative "birthers" have made about Obama while questioning
whether Obama - whose father was from Kenya and mother was from Kansas -
was born in Hawaii.
In
George Romney's case, most of the questions were raised initially by
Democrats who cited the Constitution's requirement that only a "natural
born citizen" can be president.
As
early as February 1967 - a year before the first 1968 presidential
primary - some newspapers were raising questions as to whether George
Romney's place of birth disqualified him from the presidency.
By
May 1967, U.S. congressman Emmanuel Celler, a Democrat who chaired the
House of Representatives Judiciary Committee, was expressing "serious
doubts" about George Romney's eligibility.
The
next month, another Democratic congressman inserted a lengthy treatise
into the Congressional Record in which a government lawyer - writing in a
"personal capacity" - argued that George Romney was ineligible for the
White House because he was born outside U.S. territory.
Deja vu
In
what today might seem like deja vu, eminent legal authorities soon were
queuing up to argue in favor of George Romney's eligibility.
The
New York Law Journal published a lengthy argument by a senior partner
from Sullivan & Cromwell, one of Manhattan's elite law firms,
arguing that the fact that both of George Romney's parents were U.S.
citizens clearly established him as a "natural born citizen" who was
eligible to be president.
George Romney himself was unequivocal.
"I
am a natural born citizen. My parents were American citizens. I was a
citizen at birth," he said, according to a typewritten statement found
in his archives.
Mitt Romney takes on Las Vegas
At
one point, the Congressional Research Service - an arm of the Library
of Congress that is supposed to provide authoritative but impartial
research for elected members - advised that its analysts agreed with
George Romney, according to a congressional source.
In
a paper in November aimed at clarifying presidential eligibility, the
Congressional Research Service declared that the practical, legal
meaning of "natural born citizen" would "most likely include" not only
anyone born on U.S. soil but anyone born overseas of at least one parent
who was a U.S. citizen.
Romney's dance with Trump
Mitt Romney has tried to avoid getting caught up in Trump's focus on Obama's birthplace.
"Governor
Romney has said repeatedly that he believes President Obama was born in
the United States," said Eric Fehrnstrom, a senior adviser to Romney.
However,
the presumed Republican nominee has not distanced himself from Trump,
creating what some analysts said seems to be a quiet endorsement of
Trump's efforts to raise questions about Obama among voters.
Michael
Cohen, special counsel to Trump, said that Trump and Romney never talk
about issues Trump has raised elsewhere regarding Obama's birth
certificate. Instead they talk about jobs, the economy and other matters
of public policy.
Romney plays with fire in Trump association
Asked
whether Trump sees any double standard in going after Obama when
Romney's father faced similar questions about his presidential
eligibility, Cohen told Reuters: "I don't think (Trump) has ever thought
about Mitt Romney's father's birth certificate."
Cohen
said Trump recently revived the issue of Obama's birthplace because
journalists asked him about the issue after a right-wing website
published an old blurb for an Obama book that suggested that Obama was
born in Kenya. The literary agent who wrote the blurb subsequently said
it was written in error.
Cohen
said Trump believes "the president of the United States should be the
single most transparent human being on this planet. This president lacks
that transparency."
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