By Marshall Cohen | CNN
Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley is eligible to serve as US president, despite right-wing “birther” questions about her natural-born citizenship that have been circulating in conservative media outlets and were recently amplified by former President Donald Trump.
Trump first promoted the false claim last week, by reposting a story from a conspiracy-peddling website that said Haley is disqualified from serving as president or vice president because “her parents were not US citizens at the time of her birth.” It was promoted again Wednesday by a pro-Trump legal blogger.
Trump also recently referred to Haley’s legal first name, Nimarata – misspelling it as “Nimrada” – in an online post attacking her Tuesday, in the latest example of a racist dog-whistle.
Claims that Haley can’t serve as president are false. Haley is a natural-born citizen – born in South Carolina in 1972 – and thus is eligible to serve as president.
Origins of the lie
Article II of the US Constitution sets the eligibility rules for presidents. They must be at least 35 years old; they must have lived in the US for at least 14 years; and they must be a “natural born citizen.” The Constitution doesn’t define that term, and the Supreme Court hasn’t ever ruled directly on what it means in relation to presidential eligibility.
But the legal consensus has consistently centered on the idea that a “natural-born citizen” is someone who was a citizen at the time of their birth. And in the US, anyone born on American soil automatically becomes a citizen, thanks to the 14th Amendment.
The origins of the birther allegations against Haley appear to be a recent Substack post by pro-Trump lawyer Paul Ingrassia, who graduated from Cornell Law School in 2022. Ingrassia argues that the Founding Fathers believed someone was only a “natural born citizen” if they were born on American soil to two parents who were already…
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