Michigan has the Canadian-born Governor Jennifer Granholm, an excellent
politician who photographs well and who would be an obvious thought for
vice-President. As attractive, good-looking and savvy politicians who
are not natural-born U.S. citizens proliferate, the momentum for an amendment
could be considerable and not merely factional in origin. Mae
Kuykendall
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 10/09/03 10:58AM >>> People laughed at me when I opined that if Scwarzenegger won, there'd be a movement to amend the Constitution;s requirement that the President be a "natural born citizen" . Today's paper reported Sen. Hatch "plans hearings." Shouldn't Sen. Hatch pragmatically wait to see how Ahnold does, first? ("Frist 100 days" is a ridiculous measure, but go with that at least. . .) Is this just Republican crowing over the results? Would such an amendment really have any chance of adoption? Lynne Prof. Lynne Henderson Boyd School of Law--UNLV ---------------------------------------------------------------------- This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SF Gate. The original article can be found on SFGate.com here: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2003/10/09/MN255674.DTL ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Thursday, October 9, 2003 (SF Chronicle) Outsiders agog at pick of voters/Utah senator wants amendment to let foreign-born be president Carolyn Lochhead, Chronicle Washington Bureau Washington -- <snip> National and international reaction to his election victory was perhaps best captured by the governor-elect himself. "Can you believe it?" Schwarzenegger said. "Only in America." <snip> Only in California, some Washington cynics added, although Republican Party operatives are already plotting the movie star's potential on the national political stage. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, plans hearings on a constitutional amendment to make it possible for a foreigner who has been a citizen at least 20 years to be elected president. Schwarzenegger became a citizen in 1984. <snip> E-mail Carolyn Lochhead at [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright 2003 SF Chronicle |