Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sen. Kamala Harris eligible for presidency.

- Louis Jacobson and Ciara O’Rourke

On Aug. 11, Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, announced his pick for the office of vice president he once held: Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.

“I have the great honor to announce that I’ve picked @KamalaHarr­is — a fearless fighter for the little guy, and one of the country’s finest public servants — as my running mate,” he tweeted.

About a week prior, some social media posts prematurel­y announced that Biden had tapped Harris for vice president — and declared that she was ineligible to take over the presidency.

“If crazy Joe cannot serve his full term, Kamala cannot by constituti­onal law become president,” the post says. “She is an anchor baby, mother is from India, father is Jamaican, and neither were American citizens at time of her birth.”

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

Natural-born citizen

Harris’ father and mother were born in Jamaica and India, respective­ly. But Harris herself is a natural-born citizen and eligible to be president of the United States.

Back when Harris was still a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, we

If Joe Biden can’t serve his full term, Kamala Harris “cannot by constituti­onal law become president.”

Facebook post

The statement

The verdict

Harris meets definition of “natural born citizen.” fact-checked a similar claim: that she was ineligible to run for president. That’s wrong.

“If you are born in the U.S., you are automatica­lly a natural-born U.S. citizen under the Constituti­on,” Harvard Law professor Einer Elhuage told PolitiFact in 2019.

Harris was born in Oakland, California, a spokespers­on for her campaign told us that year, “which is, was, and presumably will be, in the United States of America.”

Harris is 55 years old, two decades older than the minimum age to become president.

Her father, Donald Harris, was born in Jamaica and immigrated to the United

States after he got into the University of California-Berkeley, Kamala Harris wrote in her autobiogra­phy, “The Truths We Hold: An American Journey.” He is an emeritus economics professor at Stanford University. At the end of a bio on the school’s website, he notes his citizenshi­p status. “Jamaica (by birth); USA (by naturaliza­tion).”

Kamala Harris’ mother, Shyamala Harris, was born in Chennai, India, and moved to California after graduating from the University of Delhi to pursue a doctorate in nutrition and endocrinol­ogy at Berkeley. She met Donald Harris at the university and the couple married, separating around the time Kamala Harris was five and divorcing a few years later, according to “The Truths We Hold.”

Harris lived in California until she was in middle school, when she moved to Montreal after her mother was offered a teaching position at McGill University. She went to college at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

The U.S. Constituti­on says that “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 for the office of President.”

Experts say that Harris meets the definition of “natural born citizen.” Other federal laws and legal opinions to know for this fact-check:

The 14th Amendment, which says that “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.”

8 U.S. Code § 1401, which says people born in the United States are “nationals and citizens.”

The 1898 Supreme Court decision in the Wong Kim Ark case, which ruled that people born on U.S. soil (with a few exceptions that aren’t relevant in Harris’ case) qualify for citizenshi­p under the 14th Amendment.

Sarah Duggin, a Catholic University law professor, told us: “Her birth in the United States, to someone other than a member of a foreign diplomatic corps or otherwise not subject to U.S. jurisdicti­on, makes her a U.S. citizen. … There is no reason to look at where her parents came from, how long her parents were U.S. residents before she was born, or where she was raised.”

Several other fact-checking organizati­ons — AFP and the Associated Press among them — have also looked into these claims and agree that they are inaccurate.

We rate this Facebook post False.

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