Marco Rubio not Eligible to Serve as President or Vice President
WASHINGTON & SANTA
FE,
NM (By
Dana Milbank, WP)
October 23, 2011 ―
Say what you will
about the birthers,
but don’t call them
partisan.
The people who
brought you the
Barack Obama
birth-certificate
hullabaloo now have
a new target: Sen.
Marco Rubio of
Florida, a man often
speculated to be the
next Republican vice
presidential
nominee.
While they’re at it,
they also have Bobby
Jindal, the
Republican governor
of Louisiana and
perhaps a future
presidential
candidate, in their
sights.
Each man, the
birthers say, is
ineligible to be
president because he
runs afoul of the
constitutional
requirement a
president must be a
“natural born
citizen” of the
United States.
Rubio’s parents were
Cuban nationals at
the time of his
birth, and Jindal’s
parents were
citizens of India.
The good news for
the birthers is this
suggests they were
going after Obama,
whose father was a
Kenyan national, not
because of the
president’s
political party. The
bad news is this
supports the
suspicion they were
going after Obama
because of his race.
When I heard of the
birthers’ latest
targets, from a
participant in my
online chat, I
figured it was a
joke. But, sure
enough, Alex Leary
of the St.
Petersburg Times
reported various
bright lights of the
birther community –
Mario Apuzzo,
Charles Kerchner and
Orly Taitz – were
casting doubt on
Rubio’s eligibility.
“Senator Marco Rubio
is not a natural
born citizen of the
United States to
constitutional
standards,” Kerchner
writes on his blog.
“He was born a dual
citizen of both Cuba
and the USA. He is
thus not eligible to
serve as the
president or vice
president.”
A few months ago,
Kerchner used the
same logic to
proclaim, “Jindal is
NOT a natural-born
citizen of the
United States. His
parents were not
U.S. citizens when
he was born.”
This relies on a
rather expansive
interpretation of
“natural born.” At
this rate, it is
surely only a matter
of time before
birthers begin to
pronounce candidates
ineligible if they
were born by
C-section, or if
their mothers were
given pain
medications during
childbirth. Will
Donald Trump demand
to see their medical
records?
The absurd
accusations of the
birthers by
themselves won’t
stop Jindal or Rubio
from becoming
president. There are
far more serious
impediments in their
way — most recently
a devastating report
by The Post’s Manuel
Roig-Franzia proving
false the central
narrative of Rubio’s
political rise: that
he is the son of
exiles who fled Cuba
under Castro. In
fact, his parents
left the island,
apparently for
economic reasons, 2
1 / 2 years before
Castro came to
power.
But the wild new
turn the birthers
have taken should
serve as a timely
reminder to
Republican leaders
they need to push
back more forcefully
against the angry
and the unstable in
their ranks. Too
often, they have
done the opposite.
Jindal, for example,
encouraged the
birthers this year
when he announced
his support for
legislation that
would require
candidates for
federal office to
show proof of their
U.S. birth before
being allowed on the
ballot in Louisiana.
It was, as many
pointed out, a sad
gesture for a man
born Piyush Jindal.
Similarly, few of
the Republican
presidential
candidates have
condemned the
spectators at the
presidential debates
who applauded the
death penalty, the
idea those without
health insurance
should be left to
die and the
sentiment the
jobless are to blame
for being
unemployed. And it
seems doubtful we’ll
hear from Republican
leaders about Tea
Party Nation’s new
effort to get
business leaders to
pledge not to hire
people until the
Democrats’ “war
against business”
ends.
Of course, extremism
isn’t a uniquely
Republican problem.
My colleague
Jennifer Rubin,
noting a number of
anti-Semitic
messages seen at
Occupy Wall Street
events, asked last
week: “Respectable
politicians and
media outlets, where
is the outrage?”
There’s no evidence
the demonstrators
blaming Jewish
bankers for the
nation’s troubles
are anything but a
small minority. But
that doesn’t excuse
public figures from
an obligation to
push back against
the extremes.
The higher
prominence of loons
of all stripes is a
natural consequence
of a political
system that has lost
every last vestige
of a political
center. But in the
Obama age, this is
particularly a
problem for
Republican lawmakers
who are cowed into
silence by the fear
any criticism of the
crazies will invite
a primary challenge.
Now that the
birthers have begun
to eat their own
brightest prospects,
perhaps Republican
lawmakers will
finally feel
compelled to say
something.










