Can a person born in America Samoa, as Tulsi Gabbard was, to an American citizen be deemed a "natural-born citizen" under the U.S. Constitutional requirements for the U.S. Presidency (Article 2, as opposed to the 14th Amendment currently before SCOTUS for "anchor baby"-status purposes)?
FLASHBACK to 2020 election analysis:
Tulsi Gabbard Was Born In American Samoa. Her Presidential Run Could Raise Eligibility Questions
Michelle Broder Van Dyke, BuzzFeed News Reporter
Honolulu, Hawaii, January 11,2019
"[Then] Hawaii Rep. [to the U.S. House] Tulsi Gabbard is a US citizen by birth. But as she announces her run for president, there are already signs that she’ll have to deal with the so-called birtherism politics that have frustrated presidential campaigns and others who, like Gabbard, were born in American Samoa — a US territory.
…
"Gabbard was born on American Samoa’s largest island, Tutuila, in 1981 and was raised there until she was 2, when her family moved to Hawaii.
"Since becoming a representative in 2013 for Hawaii’s 2nd District and quickly building up a national following, Gabbard has been quietly surrounded by questions about whether being born in a US territory, where residents are not granted birthright citizenship, would impact her one day running for president.
"There are three constitutional requirements to be a US president: a person must be over the age of 35, have “been 14 years a resident within the United States,” and they must be a “natural-born citizen.”
"A “natural-born citizen” is not explicitly defined by the Constitution, but it is generally thought to mean someone “who was a US citizen from birth, who never had to go through the naturalization process,” according to University of Hawaii political science professor Colin Moore, who spoke to BuzzFeed News.
"Gabbard’s mother, Carol Gabbard, was born in Indiana, and her father, Hawaii state Sen. Mike Gabbard, was born in American Samoa to a father who was a US citizen, making Tulsi Gabbard a US citizen from birth under federal law.
"Still, there has never been a ruling by the US Supreme Court to determine whether the term “natural-born citizen” includes people born outside the US, since a candidate known to have been born in a territory or abroad has never won the presidency. Moore called this “a gray area.”
"The two most often cited comparisons to Gabbard are former Republican presidential nominee John McCain, who was born in the Panama Canal Zone while his father was stationed there with the US Navy, and Sen. Ted Cruz, who was born in Canada.
"When McCain ran against Barack Obama in 2008, his eligibility was challenged in federal district court in New Hampshire, because the Panama Canal Zone was an unincorporated US territory when the candidate was born. Some legal experts reasoned McCain was not a natural-born citizen because he was born outside the US in 1936, a year before a law conferred citizenship on children born to US citizens in the Canal Zone. Others argued that it didn’t matter where he was born, because his parents were US citizens — one was even serving the country at the time.
"In April 2008, the Senate passed a nonbinding resolution deeming McCain a natural-born citizen, but the resolution was not tested in court.
"During the 2016 Republican primary, Donald Trump raised questions about whether Cruz was a natural-born citizen, and several legal challenges were brought in lower courts.
"Cruz was born in Calgary, Alberta, in 1970 to a mother who was a US citizen born in Delaware and a father who was Cuban [at the time], although he is now a US citizen. Since Cruz was born to at least one US citizen, he is a citizen from birth.
"Questions around Cruz’s eligibility were compared to the birther conspiracy theory that Trump helped enflame about Barack Obama, which falsely suggested that Obama was born outside the US and therefore was not a natural-born US citizen.
"If Gabbard becomes a major presidential candidate, the pattern shows her birthplace will “absolutely” become a political issue for her, said Moore.
"In Gabbard’s case, the debate is rooted in the fact that most people born in American Samoa would be disqualified from being president of the United States, since the US does not grant birthright citizenship to those born in the territory — instead they are given the unique status of “non-citizen US nationals.” American Samoans can become US citizens by moving to the states and going through an expedited version of the naturalization process that foreign-born nationals go through to gain US citizenship." …
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/mbvd/tulsi-gabbard-president-2020-born-american-samoa
PART 1 of 3(continued in Part 2)