EMET ONLINE
News Release
October 28, 2014
Today, the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET) asked the U.S. Supreme Court to honor the Foreign Relations Authorization Act of 2002 torecognize Jerusalem as a city governed by Israel. Opening arguments in the case of zivotofsky v. kerry, a case that challenges the unwillingness of the Obama Administration to enforce this law, will start on November 3, 2014. EMET has submitted an amicus brief in this case, supporting Zivotofsky.
In 2002, the U.S. Congress, in a strong bipartisan vote, passed the Foreign Relations Authorization Act, also known as Public Law 107-228. In §214(d) of this law, the statute required the U.S. government to put “Israel” as the place of birth in the passports of Jerusalem-born U.S. citizens, if they requested it. President Bush signed the Act into law on September 30, 2002. But, since 2002, the State Department has refused to enforce this law. The current Obama Administration supports the position of the State Department. Approximately 50,000 Americans have been disenfranchised and disrespected by these willful and illegal acts.
Menachem Zivotofsky was born in October 2002, to Americans parents living in Israel. After passage of the law, his parents requested that “Israel” be added to the place of birth on his passport, but their request was denied. Normally, when an American citizen is born abroad, the State Department issued passport will list only a country of birth. The one and only exception to that rule occurs if the citizen is born in Jerusalem, which the State Department refuses to acknowledge as a part of Israel. This is both a violation of American law and of normal State Department procedure.
The Zivotofskys sued to rectify this illegal act in 2004. Since then, the case has wound up and down the federal court system, and is now approaching a final decision in the highest court of the land. The likely question before the Supreme Court is – does the President have the exclusive right to recognize foreign nations, or is this a shared power with the Congress?