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The Washington Post-Ramaswamy echoing Trump calls for an end to birthright citizenship

September 28, 2023   5 min   928 words

这篇报道涉及共和党总统候选人Vivek Ramaswamy提出终止出生权公民身份的建议,这一立场与前总统唐纳德·特朗普的一度相似。他认为应该结束非法移民及其在美国出生的子女的出生权公民身份。这一主张在共和党内并不罕见,特朗普在2015年曾提出类似的建议。 Ramawamy的观点主要基于美国宪法第14修正案,该修正案保障了在美国出生的大多数人的出生权公民身份。他认为,非法移民的子女不应该获得公民身份,因为他们的父母“违法入境”。 然而,大多数法律专家认为,要改变在美国出生人的出生权,可能需要宪法修正案而不是联邦立法或行政命令。共和党参议员蒂姆·斯科特表示,14修正案的当前解释是错误的,认为它最初是为了解决奴隶制问题而制定的,而不是为了非法移民。 这场辩论还涉及其他移民问题,包括“梦想者”(DACA计划的受益人)的合法公民身份问题以及边境安全问题。 总的来说,这个议题在共和党内引发了分歧,涉及宪法解释、移民政策和国界安全等多个问题。这场辩论反映了美国社会对移民问题的不同看法和立场,这仍然是一个备受争议的话题,需要深入讨论和审议。

2023-09-28T02:23:38.337Z

Vivek Ramaswamy took an immigration stance Wednesday night that is similar to one Donald Trump once took. (Melina Mara/The Washington Post)

Republican presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy resurrected a 2015 proposal of then-candidate Donald Trump at Wednesday’s debate: ending birthright citizenship.

He was asked by Univision host Ilia Calderón “what legal premise” he would use to expel undocumented immigrants and their American-born children from the country. Ramaswamy began by noting that — while his opponents onstage “are on the right side of this issue” by supporting the militarization of the southern border, defunding “sanctuary cities” and the end to foreign aid to Mexico and Central America — he would go a “step further” by ending “birthright citizenship for the kids of illegal immigrants in this country.”

Ramaswamy, the son of Indian immigrants, broke into an anti-immigrant argument by saying that the 14th Amendment — which guarantees birthright citizenship to most people born in the United States — says “all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the laws and jurisdiction thereof, are citizens.”

Because of this, he argued, children of undocumented immigrants born in the United States should not be granted citizenship, because their parents “broke the law” to be in the country.

“As the father of two sons, it is hard for me to look them in the eye and say: ‘You have to follow the law,’ when our own government fails to follow its own laws,” Ramaswamy said.

Analysis and key moments from the second Republican debate

Birthright citizenship is a common target of Republican candidates on the campaign trail. In 2015, Trump proposed that Congress should end birthright citizenship for children born to undocumented immigrants in the United States.

And, in 2018, Trump said he planned to issue an executive order that would end the automatic grant of citizenship to those born in this country to noncitizens. That order never came to fruition.

As The Washington Post reported then, while legal experts have debated for years how to interpret the citizenship clause of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, the consensus is one-sided: Most agree with the long-held tradition that it grants citizenship to those born on U.S. soil.

The first section of the amendment says: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

Some legal scholars argue that the phrase “and subject to the jurisdiction thereof” seems to give the government some leeway to restrict the right, just as other constitutional principles can be limited.

GOP hopefuls say both parties — and Trump — should be blamed if government shuts down

But the mainstream opinion from both right and left is that it is more likely that a constitutional amendment, rather than federal legislation or an executive order, would be needed to change the birthright conferred on people born here.

Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), however, appeared to agree with Ramaswamy on the debate stage Wednesday by arguing that the current interpretation of the 14th Amendment is wrong.

“I think it’s simple that clearly it was designed for slavery, and not for illegal immigration,” he said.

Scott, however, did not delve deeper into this argument and instead pivoted to attacking Ramaswamy’s business relationship with China.

Throughout the second Republican presidential debate, which was held Wednesday night at the Reagan Foundation Library in Simi Valley, Calif., candidates pivoted to immigration and the situation at the southern border when answering questions on other topics. When asked about President Biden’s visit to the picket line in Detroit, Scott said the president “should not be on the picket line, he should be on the southern border working to close our southern border.”

Former vice president Mike Pence, meanwhile, was asked several times if he would work with Congress to secure a legal pathway to citizenship for foreign-born people who were brought to the United States illegally as children or who overstayed their visas as children — people known as “dreamers” — and who are allowed to live and work in the country under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which the Trump administration sought to end.

But instead of saying whether he’d fully end the program or find a legal pathway to citizenship for DACA recipients, Pence pivoted instead to talk about the Trump administration’s immigration policies, and how he would replicate them as president.

“The truth is, we need to fix a broken immigration system and I’ll do that,” Pence said. “But first and foremost, a nation without borders is not a nation. And we have to secure the southern border of the United States of America. I know how to do it, and we will do it again.”

Other candidates attempted to blame the nation’s crime statistics on immigrants.

“The second we stopped being a country of laws, we give up everything this country was founded on, so we have to secure the border,” former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley said. She said, without presenting evidence, that crime in Philadelphia is because of the city’s sanctuary policies. “You see what’s happening in Philadelphia right now. It’s got to stop.”

Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, meanwhile, claimed that Democrats are not “enforcing that law” at the border. He vowed that, on Day 1 of his presidency, he would “sign an executive order to send the National Guard to partner with Customs and Border Patrol to make sure that we stop the flow of fentanyl over the border.”

Robert Barnes contributed to this report.