Posts Tagged ‘birth’


11.11.2011

How wrangle over Jerusalem is at the core of a US Supreme Court showdown

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Did Congress overstep its authority when it instructed US officials to list ‘Israel’ as the place of birth for Americans born in Jerusalem? Supreme Court justices heard arguments Monday.

The status of Jerusalem, bitterly contested for ages by rivals in the Middle East, has for years also divided the legislative and executive branches of the US government.

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Now a law passed by Congress in 2002 instructing US officials to list ?Israel? as the place of birth for Americans born in Jerusalem is at the core of a potentially historic showdown at the US Supreme Court pitting legislative against executive power.

On Monday the justices heard arguments in the case, Zivotofsky v. Clinton, examining whether Congress overstepped its authority when it passed the law.

Based on questions asked at oral argument, the justices appear inclined to leave the intricacies of foreign policy to the State Department.

The case arises in the relatively limited context of how best to record the birth of a child to American citizens when the birth takes place in Jerusalem. But the underlying issues will likely force the justices to confront irreconcilable claims to power from co-equal branches of government.

On one side is a State Department policy that requires that the US passport of a child born in Jerusalem record the place of birth as merely Jerusalem.

On the other side is the federal law that requires US officials to record Israel as the place of birth, whenever requested by US-citizen parents.

Roughly a month after the law was passed, Ari and Naomi Zivotofsky, both US citizens living in Jerusalem, were blessed with the birth of a son, Menachem.

The boy?s mother applied for a US passport, but was disappointed to learn it would not record the place of her son?s birth as Israel, only Jerusalem. State Department officials cited the Jerusalem policy.

The Zivotofskys sued, asking a federal judge to force the State Department to comply with the Congressional statute. The judge declined, ruling that the case raised a political question that was best left to the political branches of government to resolve. An appeals court agreed.

In taking up the case, the Supreme Court asked both parties to address the political question issue as well as whether the 2002 congressional statute violated the president?s authority to recognize foreign governments.

Both sides in the debate cite different sources of authority.

Washington lawyer Nathan Lewin, representing the Zivotofskys, told the justices on Monday Congress was acting under its power to regulate passports.

Solicitor General Donald Verrilli countered that the congressional action intrudes on the president?s authority to recognize foreign governments.

The underlying issue is highly emotional and freighted with historic and religious significance.

Israel has long claimed Jerusalem as its capital, but US diplomats ? with an eye toward being honest brokers in Arab-Israeli peace talks ? have declined to endorse the designation.

Instead, the State Department has maintained an official policy of neutrality over the ultimate jurisdiction of the city. Jerusalem is considered a sacred site to Christians, Jews, and Muslims, and US officials fear any perceived US policy change might spark a backlash among Muslims.

In the Muslim world, Jerusalem under an Israeli flag is a rallying cry, particularly among Islamic militants.

Mr. Lewin downplayed potential foreign policy fallout from the congressional mandate. ?This gives the individual passport holder a choice,? he told the justices.

Lewin said the congressional directive would apply to 50,000 passports and would simply allow each passport holder to decide whether to self-identify with ?Jerusalem? as a birth place, or ?Israel.?

He said Congress has the authority to impose such restrictions on passports, including what the passport says.

?This is not in our view a recognition case,? he said. ?This is a passport case.?

Lewin said there is no political question involved in the case. He said the courts must decide whether the statute is constitutional, and if it is constitutional, then the courts must enforce it.

?We live in a system under which Congress passes the law and the president has the duty to be the sole instrument of foreign policy,? Lewin said. ?But when Congress disapproves of what he does ? Congress prevails.?

Solicitor General Verrilli urged the court to find that the executive branch has exclusive power to recognize foreign governments and that the congressional directive infringes on that power.

Verrilli said the Jerusalem issue is ?a very sensitive and delicate matter.? ?He added: ?This is an area in which the executive?s got to make the judgment because it?s of paramount importance that the nation speak with one voice.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/R4SJKMMctlw/How-wrangle-over-Jerusalem-is-at-the-core-of-a-US-Supreme-Court-showdown

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20.10.2011

Reports: French first lady gives birth to girl

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French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, leaves a clinic, Wednesday Oct.19, 2011 in Paris, and where his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is reportedly expected to give birth. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, leaves a clinic, Wednesday Oct.19, 2011 in Paris, and where his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is reportedly expected to give birth. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, leaves a clinic in the rain, Wednesday Oct.19, 2011 in Paris, and where his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is reportedly expected to give birth. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, center, leaves a clinic in the rain, Wednesday Oct.19, 2011 in Paris, and where his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is reportedly expected to give birth. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, center, leaves a clinic in the rain, Wednesday Oct.19, 2011 in Paris, and where his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is reportedly expected to give birth. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy leaves a clinic under the rain, Wednesday Oct.19, 2011 in Paris, and where his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is reportedly expected to give birth. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

PARIS (AP) ? French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy gave birth to a baby girl on Wednesday night ? the first infant born to a sitting president of modern-day France, the French media reported.

President Nicolas Sarkozy, finishing up a meeting in Frankfurt on the euro debt crisis, was absent when the couple’s first child was born shortly before 8 p.m. (1800 GMT), according to BFM TV. He reportedly arrived at the small, private Muette Clinic about 11 p.m. (0900 GMT) ? his third trip Wednesday to the facility.

Europe 1 radio said the birth “went well” for the 43-year-old mother, a singer and former supermodel. She entered the medical facility in western Paris in the morning accompanied by Sarkozy, according to the reports.

There was no official confirmation of the birth. The presidential entourage reiterated earlier Wednesday that no birth announcement would be forthcoming.

The couple had been coy about the impending birth from the start, with measured doses of information.

“It’s obviously a happy event,” Nadine Morano, a junior minister and friend of the president, told BFM, clearly reacting to the news reports. Sarkozy was “very attentive, full of attention toward Carlo” when he spoke with her by phone on Tuesday during a flight with the minister to Nice, she said.

The couple married in February 2008, less than a year after Sarkozy took office iand less than four months after his divorce from second wife Cecilia Ciganer-Albeniz.

The Italian-born first lady has a 10-year-old son from a previous relationship and the president has three sons from his two previous marriages ? and is a grandfather since January.

Sarkozy was seen entering the medical clinic in late afternoon, then leaving about 30 minutes later ? before rushing off to Frankfurt for a meeting on the euro debt crisis ahead of a European summit on Sunday. With a scheduled visit Thursday morning to Normandy, Sarkozy was taking a gamble. It was not immediately clear whether he would cancel his visit to Normandy.

The birth ended sometimes breathless speculation about Bruni-Sarkozy’s due date. Photographers staked out the clinic since early October, with a security detail limiting their access.

Bruni-Sarkozy has said that she was staying mum about the event because she’s superstitious. The couple also decided not to find out the baby’s sex in advance.

“You don’t have a child for the gallery,” Bruni-Sarkozy told French TV network TF1 earlier this month. “I will do everything to protect this child … I will not show photos of this child, I will never expose this child.”

While a newborn surely offers new personal horizons for the presidential couple, the question is whether a baby will bolster the sympathy quotient for the perpetually unpopular Sarkozy, especially if the infant remains in the shadows.

Sarkozy is expected to seek a second mandate in presidential elections six months away. However, recent polls put his chief rival, Socialist candidate Francois Hollande, in the lead.

___

Jamey Keaten in Paris contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects marriage date to read 2008, 7th paragraph.)

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-19-EU-France-President’s-Baby/id-2c2033b9d66841d8a44bf98767bc15a4

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