Ruling denies Obamas attempt to have complaint that seeks to strike President from Georgia ballot dismissed
Birthers are hailing a decision by a judge in Georgia that could see Barack Obama struck from the presidential state ballot if Obama fails to prove that he fulfils the natural born citizen constitutional requirement to be President.
Deputy Chief Judge Michael Malihi in the Office of State Administrative Hearings denied a motion by Obama asking to dismiss the complaint that seeks to keep his name off the state ballot during the March presidential primary. The judges decision now sets the stage for a Jan. 26 hearing on the issue in Fulton County, reports the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer.
The complaint was originally filed by Orly Taitz on behalf of a Georgia resident. Taitz, a prominent birther who previously represented two soldiers who refused to deploy to Afghanistan over their doubts that Obama is a natural born U.S. citizen and therefore ineligible to be commander in chief, lauded the judges ruling.
I can now depose Obama and everybody else (i)nvolved without any impediment, the California attorney posted on her website.
Taitz, along with several other Georgia residents, will now be able to present their evidence that Obama was not born in the United States in a court of law unless the ruling is overturned on appeal before January 26.
The case, Farrar v Obama, was also brought by J. Mark Hatfield, a Republican state representative who last year failed to pass a bill that would have required presidential candidates to submit proof of qualifications.
The Georgia Election Code (the Code) mandates that [e]very candidate for federal and state office who is certified by the state executive committee of a political party or who files a notice of candidacy shall meet the constitutional and statutory qualifications for holding the office being sought, stated the ruling in response to President Obamas attempt to have the case dismissed.
Despite the White House being forced to release a purported copy of Obamas birth certificate last year, the controversy has yet to completely die down.
One time Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump repeatedly raised questions surrounding Obamas background during the spring of 2011 before going cold on the issue, a move prominent birther and author Jerome Corsi claimed was an organized political stunt to neutralize the issue.
The release of Corsis best-selling book, Wheres the Birth Certificate?, coincided with the White House deciding to release Obamas alleged long form birth certificate. Corsi points to evidence that the document is a forgery created using modern computer techniques and has numerous discrepancies with a genuine 1961 birth certificate created by a typewriter.
Poster Comment:
British Kenyans are not eligible to be on the presidential ballot in Georgia.