According to everything I have read, anyone born in the U.S., regardless of who their parents are, is a "natural born citizen". If the person is born overseas, and at least one parent is not a U.S. citizen, then they would not qualify as "natural born". If born to two U.S. citizens overseas, I believe they still are considered a U.S. citizen, but I don't know if they are considered "natural born", but since noname was born in Panama to two U.S. citizens, and was considered eligible to run for President, that doesn't seem to matter. (but I think the whole "natural born" thing is moot at this point in history)
According to everything I have read, anyone born in the U.S., regardless of who their parents are, is a...
US citizen. Natural born citizen involves the parents citizenship. What I read said that Heels Up's father had dual citizenship with ??Jamaica??, and that is what the potential problem is.
Mixed answers come back to this question. I need a Constitutional scholar to provide the definitive answer (but of course, the leftists out there wouldn't care)
According to everything I have read, anyone born in the U.S., regardless of who their parents are, is a "natural born citizen". If the person is born overseas, and at least one parent is not a U.S. citizen, then they would not qualify as "natural born". If born to two U.S. citizens overseas, I believe they still are considered a U.S. citizen, but I don't know if they are considered "natural born", but since noname was born in Panama to two U.S. citizens, and was considered eligible to run for President, that doesn't seem to matter. (but I think the whole "natural born" thing is moot at this point in history)
US citizen. Natural born citizen involves the parents citizenship. What I read said that Heels Up's father had dual citizenship with ??Jamaica??, and that is what the potential problem is.
Mixed answers come back to this question. I need a Constitutional scholar to provide the definitive answer (but of course, the leftists out there wouldn't care)