From People for the American Way's
blog Right Wing Watch:
Opponents of birthright citizenship have mobilized in Congress and in fourteen state legislatures to pass legislation that would reinterpret the 14th Amendment to deny birthright citizenship. At a forum of state legislators who support scrapping birthright citizenship, Republican State Rep. Daniel B. Verdi of South Carolina compared illegal immigration to “the malady of slavery” and Republican State Rep. Daryl Metcalfe said such legislation would help “bring an end to the illegal alien invasion.”
Eagle Forum’s Phyllis Schlafly praised their efforts in a column today, promoting the plans by Republican politicians to do-away with birthright citizenship through legislation rather than an amendment to the constitution even though the Supreme Court ruled that even the children of illegal immigrants have constitutional protections in United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898), a ruling confirmed in Plyler v. Doe (1982).
From Schlafly's column:
It's long overdue for Congress to stop the racket of bringing pregnant women into this country to give birth, receive free medical care and then call their babies U.S. citizens entitled to all American rights and privileges plus generous handouts. Between 300,000 and 400,000 babies are born to illegal aliens in the United States every year, at least 10 percent of all births.
…
The amnesty crowd tries to tell us that the 14th Amendment makes automatic citizens out of "all persons" born in the United States, but they conveniently ignore the rest of the sentence. It's not enough to be "born" in the U.S. -- you can claim citizenship only if you are "subject to the jurisdiction thereof."
The 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, overruled the Dred Scott decision wherein the U.S. Supreme Court declared that African-Americans could not be citizens. Those who support court-made law should forever be reminded of Abraham Lincoln's warning that if we accept the supremacy of judges, "the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal."
So what would be the Republicans' alternative? A generation of stateless citizens?
PBS NewsHour reported last month that the Dominican Republic retroactively revoked Haitian immigrants' citizenship because their ancestors weren't citizens! I thought that conservatives
VALUED being American and citizenship and thus would NOT want a bigger generation of stateless people in their country. Ending birthright citizenship won't just solve the illegal immigration issue - what about the issues of border security, human smuggling, and employers that willfully hire the undocumented?
Oh, the conservative term to describe children of illegal aliens? "Anchor baby". And don't you think that given that people of European ancestry will become a minority by 2050 that anti-immigrant activists are trying to use code language to "take their country back"?