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Why theory on Kamala Harris not eligible as US VP is xenophobic, false

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Read more about Why theory on Kamala Harris not eligible as US VP is xenophobic, false on Business Standard. When it comes to constitutional claims, even extreme ones, it’s important to explain why they are wrong in order to refute them
The theory that is ineligible to be vice president because her parents were not U. S. citizens is xenophobic and false. But it’s not exactly the same as the birther conspiracy theory that said President wasn’t born in the United States at all. Birtherism was a conspiracy theory based on a factual lie. Even debunking that kind of theory can be a bad idea because it tends to help the falsehood reach more people — some of whom then believe the lie. The anti-Harris theory, in contrast, is based on a fringe constitutional claim about the meaning of the words of the 14th Amendment. When it comes to constitutional claims, even extreme ones, it’s important to explain why they are wrong in order to refute them. It’s therefore both valuable and necessary to explain carefully why this theory is incorrect as a matter of constitutional law. To do that, you need to start with the theory itself. It starts with the constitutional provision of Article II that says, “No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President.” (To be vice president, you have to meet the eligibility requirements to be president.) According to the attack theory, the meaning of “natural born” should be derived from the 14th amendment, which says: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States.

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