Los Angeles Times

Natural born leaders

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Atelltale sign that Sen. Ted Cruz is rising in the GOP presidenti­al polls is that some of his opponents — one billionair­e casino mogul in particular — are suggesting that the Canadian-born conservati­ve can’t legally hold the office because he was, ahem, born in Canada. This kind of attack has become a rite of passage for presidenti­al aspirants in recent years; witness the “birther” controvers­y that dogged Barack Obama (born in Hawaii to an American mother and Kenyan father) long into his presidency, as well as the sniping from the fringes about Republican nominees John McCain (born in the Panama Canal zone to American parents) and Mitt Romney (who also encountere­d “birthers” who doubted that he was born in the U.S. to actual citizens, which he was).

Just as with Obama, McCain and Romney, the eligibilit­y questions about Cruz are laughable. His father is a Cuban emigre who was working in Calgary at the time of Cruz’s birth, but his mother is an American from Delaware. Under U.S. law, anyone born to a U.S. citizen is a citizen too, no matter how far outside the borders they draw their first breaths. Canada, meanwhile, grants citizenshi­p to anyone born there, regardless of how well they handle a puck. As a result, Cruz had dual citizenshi­p automatica­lly from the day he was born in 1970 until he renounced his Canadian citizenshi­p in 2014.

The U.S. Constituti­on requires the president to be a “natural born Citizen,” which simply means that he or she was born a citizen, as Cruz was. He also meets the Constituti­on’s two other requiremen­ts for the White House: He’s more than 34 years old and has lived at least 14 years in the United States. So he’s clearly eligible for the office. Whether he’s qualified is an entirely different question, although the Republican­s who declared Obama unprepared because he was a firstterm senator when he sought to become Commander in Chief don’t seem to be phased by that aspect of Cruz’s resume.

Some have agitated for a more narrow interpreta­tion of “natural born Citizen” in an effort to rule out more candidates. But voters need better choices, not fewer of them. As we’ve argued before, this is a nation that champions meritocrac­y. Its values and bountiful opportunit­ies are a magnet for smart, capable people from around the world. We should amend the Constituti­on to open the Oval Office to naturalize­d citizens as well as those who have been citizens from birth. The real measure of candidates isn’t where they were born or to whom, it’s how well they can do the difficult job of leading the country.

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