Republican Ted Cruz asked a federal court in Houston to throw out a lawsuit questioning whether he is eligible to be president of the United States because he was born in Canada, saying the case against him "suffers from fatal deficiencies."
Lawyers
for Cruz contend in the filing made on Monday that the U.S. senator
from Texas meets the constitutional requirements to serve as president
and that the Houston lawyer trying to have the court block his bid does
not have standing to bring the case.
"Senator Cruz is a 'natural-born citizen' eligible to serve as President of the United States," the motion to dismiss said, adding, the "plaintiff is essentially implicating the Court in a political dispute that it lacks authority to adjudicate."
The lawsuit brought in January by Newton Schwartz,
an 85-year-old self-described liberal, also cited Cruz's stance on
issues such as abortion rights, gay marriage and the Bible in a 27-page
argument against the senator's eligibility.
The
lawsuit filed in the Southern District of Texas is a class action,
meaning others can join. It requests a ruling before the Nov. 8
presidential election.
Lawyers for Cruz also argue
he has yet to be the Republican Party's nominee and it would be
premature for a court to address the issue.
"Nowhere
does Plaintiff, who acknowledges that he is a Democrat ... explain how
he is harmed by Senator Cruz’s presence on the Republican primary
ballot," the Cruz filing said.
Billionaire
Donald Trump, the front-runner in the race for the Republican
presidential nomination, has repeatedly questioned whether Cruz is
eligible and warned that his winning the nomination could throw the
party into chaos and hand the election to the Democrats.
Cruz was born in Calgary, Alberta in 1970. At the time, his mother was a U.S. citizen and his father was Cuban.
He
has dismissed attacks on his eligibility and noted in the filing that
2008 Republican presidential nominee John McCain and 1968 Republican
candidate George Romney also were born outside the United States but
were considered eligible to be president.
The U.S.
Constitution says a president or vice president must be a "natural-born
citizen" but does not say whether the term means the candidate must be
born on U.S. soil or just be a citizen at birth. According to legal
experts, any child born to an American mother or father, no matter
where, is considered a U.S. citizen.
The case is Schwartz v. Cruz, 4:16-cv-00106, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas (Houston).
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