RIV
Bear with me, this rambles some
And i ask only because i tried researching it and got nothing satisfactory.
Two kids, one is born in the US, but emigrates (with parents) at 6 months to say, Canada, and grows up there.
One Canadian born kid (with parents) at the same age, comes to, and grows up in, the US.
Who is more American, in your opinion?
How about legally, which is where i brick walled.
Would the Canadian raised kid be able to run for president?
What if both sets of parents took citizenship tests, would the American raised kid be considered eligible for the presidency?
If not, would he at least be considered legally American because his parents became so, or would he need to take a citizenship test of his own eventually?
BAR
Re: Bear with me, this rambles some
Originally posted by riv6672
And i ask only because i tried researching it and got nothing satisfactory.Two kids, one is born in the US, but emigrates (with parents) at 6 months to say, Canada, and grows up there.
One Canadian born kid (with parents) at the same age, comes to, and grows up in, the US.
Who is more American, in your opinion?
How about legally, which is where i brick walled.
Would the Canadian raised kid be able to run for president?
What if both sets of parents took citizenship tests, would the American raised kid be considered eligible for the presidency?
If not, would he at least be considered legally American because his parents became so, or would he need to take a citizenship test of his own eventually?
In my opinion the one growing up and living in the US is more American.
Legally, the phrasing "natural born citizen", which is a requirement for the US presidency, is not quite clear (take Ted Cruz and the argument surrounding his eligibility). However, it is pretty much uncontentious that a child born in Canada to non-American/Canadian parents is NOT eligible to be president of the United States, while a child born in the United States is eligible.
The citizenship test doesn't matter.
A child can obtain citizenship (though not the right to run for president) through the parents naturalization after the birth, but it's not a default thing, and some requirements need to be met, you can read more about it here: https://www.uscis.gov/us-citizenship/citizenship-through-parents (particularly the second table addresses your question in specific).