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News / Nation & World

Trump making inroads with voters on Cruz, birther issue

By Maria Recio, McClatchy Washington Bureau
Published: January 12, 2016, 6:29pm

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s presidential rallies now feature the blaring sounds of Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.,” a not-so-subtle dig at his closest rival, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who was born in Canada.

The New York billionaire hasn’t let up on his questioning of Cruz’s standing under the Constitution that only “natural born” U.S. citizens are eligible to be president, and there are signs that his effort is paying off.

In Iowa, Trump now is slightly ahead of Cruz, who had been leading in the Hawkeye State and has been a strong second to Trump in national polls. Trump edges Cruz 28 percent to 26 percent in Iowa, according to a poll released Tuesday by Public Policy Polling.

The senator could be in further trouble once more voters in Iowa understand his background: Asked about Cruz’s birthplace, the poll found that “36 percent of Cruz voters aren’t aware yet that he wasn’t born in the United States, and 24 percent of Cruz voters say someone born outside the country shouldn’t be allowed to be president.”

“In a race where only 2 points separate Cruz and Trump, the birther issue could really make a difference in the final stretch,” said Dean Debnam, president of Public Policy Polling, a Democratic-leaning polling company in Durham, N.C. “Republican voters generally don’t think someone born outside the country should be president, and that’s why Trump is milking it for all it’s worth.”

The Iowa caucuses for both parties are Feb. 1, and the Public Policy Polling survey queried 530 likely Republican caucusgoers Jan. 8-10. Trump began speaking out last week about Cruz’s eligibility to be president.

Cruz maintains that the law is “settled” because his mother, Eleanor Cruz, was a U.S. citizen at the time of his birth in 1970 in Calgary and even released her birth certificate.

He seemed to discount the possibility that she was a dual citizen — Canadian as well as U.S. — Sunday on CNN, despite her name appearing on a 1974 Canadian voter roll alongside that of her husband, Rafael Cruz, who has said he became a Canadian citizen during the eight years the couple was in the country. Cruz said, “She’s been an American citizen all 81 years of her life. She’s never been a citizen of any other place.”

Tuesday on Fox News, Trump said: “You have a cloud over Ted’s head. I don’t know how you solve it without going to court.”

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