UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT CASE
Hamdi vs. Rumsfeld
Remarks by
Edith Hakola
Vice President
The Center for American Unity
Capitol Hill Club Press Luncheon
March 25, 2004
As the debate on mass immigration is gaining media
attention, an important factor is largely ignored.
The millions of aliens permitted to remain
illegally in the United States and the new proposals to increase that number
by offering amnesty and bringing unlimited numbers of so-called “guest
workers” to the United States have a huge hidden cost to American citizens
The citizenship clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment is now erroneously interpreted to recognize any infant born in the
United States as an American citizen.
That means that children who are born to
these millions of illegal aliens and “temporary” guest workers are
automatically presumed to be American citizens – entitled to all forms of
American welfare - health care, education, social security (including
disability payments at any age) and to such political rights as running for
office and the right to vote in American elections.
These alien children now have rights
identical to the rights of children of American citizens. This dilution of
citizenship – and the impact on the future of the United States – is rarely
a part of the debate on immigration.
The erroneous interpretation ignores a very
important restriction. The Fourteenth Amendment provides that to be a
citizen, an infant born in the United States also must be subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States.
A case currently before the
United States Supreme Court offers an illustration of the bizarre results
arising from this erroneous interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s
citizenship clause – and offers an opportunity to expose this danger to our
national interest.
Yaser Esam Hamdi is an enemy combatant, a
Saudi citizen captured in Afghanistan while fighting against the United
States, who claims the protection of American citizenship because he was
born in the United States to a temporary worker.
In the case, Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, the
Government’s primary concern seems to be the President’s right to detain an
enemy combatant. The Government is assuming Hamdi is a citizen without ever
applying the jurisdiction requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment’s
citizenship clause. Thus no party in the case is contesting Hamdi’s claim
to be a citizen of the United States merely because he happened to be born
in Louisiana.
Thus the Court and the news media are
focusing on the issue of detention of enemy combatants and overlooking the
more important question: whether Hamdi is a United States citizen under our
Constitution.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that,
All persons
born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction
thereof, are citizens of the United States . . .
The assumption that Hamdi is a citizen
ignores the critical phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” That
phrase means United States citizenship requires more than the accident of
being born on U.S. soil – an allegiance to the United States is necessary.
Yaser Hamdi’s parents were Saudi citizens.
They were working in the U.S. temporarily. They had no intention of staying
or pursuing American citizenship. They were not fully “subject to the
jurisdiction” of the United States.
For example, Mr. Hamdi Sr.
could not be drafted into the United States military. Mr. and Mrs. Hamdi
could not be guilty of treason – they owed no allegiance to the United
States. Neither does their Saudi son.
We are filing the amicus brief to alert the
Court to the broad ramifications for the future of the United States of the
erroneous presumption of citizenship for an enemy alien such as Hamdi who
does not now have, and never had, any allegiance to the United States.
The facts of this case
illustrate the extreme results created by the misinterpretation of the
Fourteenth Amendment’s citizenship clause – and they provide a focus for
considering the future consequences to American citizenship if uncontrolled
mass immigration and this misinterpretation of the law continue.