Mary Brigid McManamon
Widener University Delaware
Law School
June 2, 2014
June 2, 2014
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[Re: 1952 McCarran-Walter Act--lgstarr]
Page 345: “A bedrock principle of our constitutional system
holds that Congress cannot make such an alteration…”
Page 346: “Congress cannot amend the Constitution by
statute.”
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The relationship between Congress and the American
Constitution is quite different. According to the Supreme Court in Marbury v.
Madison, 121 to allow Congress the same latitude as Parliament
would subvert the very foundation
of all written constitutions. It would declare that an act, which, according to
the principles and theory of our government, is entirely void; is yet, in
practice, completely obligatory. It would declare, that if the legislature
shall do what is expressly forbid[d]en, such act, notwithstanding the express
prohibition, is in reality effectual. It would be giving to the legislature a
practical and real omnipotence, with the same breath which professes to
restrict their powers within narrow limits.122
Therefore, Congress cannot alter who is eligible to run for
President by statute. Such a dramatic change requires a constitutional
amendment.123
Unsurprisingly, no evidence suggests Congress intended to
expand the class of persons who could run for President. Moreover, early
commentators agreed that the use of “natural born” in the first naturalization
act did not amend Article II. For example, St. George Tucker¾a professor of law at the
College of William and Mary124¾published
his edition of Blackstone’s Commentaries in 1803, wherein he provided his own
notes concerning the differences between English and American law.125
With respect to naturalization and citizenship, he cited all of the American
naturalization statutes enacted to that date, including the 1790 Act.126
He then concluded that “[p]ersons [] naturalized according to these acts, are
entitled to all the rights of natural-born citizens, except . . . they are
forever incapable of being chosen to the office of president of the United
States.”127 In any event, Congress swiftly repealed the 1790 statute
in 1795.128
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IV. CONCLUSION The introduction to this Article posed a
question: “in the eyes of early Americans, would someone born in a foreign
country of American parents be a ‘natural born citizen’ and therefore eligible
to be President of the United States?” The pertinent historical materials lead
to only one conclusion: aside from children born to U.S. ambassadors or
soldiers in hostile armies, the answer is “no.”
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