▲ Senator Kamala Harris 


President Donald Trump's "conspiracy theories of birthplace" are raising controversy again toward Senator Camela Harris, the first black female vice president in US history.

This was followed by active advocacy for a conspiracy theory that insisted that former President Barack Obama was not entitled to be elected because his birthplace was not in the United States, the incumbent president was directly racist in the presidential election phase. It is an aspect that promotes human conspiracy theory.

Former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidential candidate, is not only strongly opposing it, but even inside the Republican Party, there is a headwind with an open line toward President Trump.

The conspiracy theory in question spread as the right-wing lawyer John Eastman of Chapman University spread the writings written by right-wing lawyer John Eastman of Chapman University because Congressman Harris, who has a Jamaican father and an Indian mother, was not born in the United States.

The Washington Post (WP) said on the 14th local time that Jenna Ellis, legal counsel at Trump Camp, also retweeted the article.

President Trump was also asked during a White House briefing the day before, and said, “I heard today that she (senator Harris) did not meet the requirements,” referring to Eastman attorney. “The attorney who wrote that was a highly qualified and very talented Attorney" added credibility.

He said it was a very serious problem.

In the past, President Trump also actively participated in the conspiracy theory that President Obama was not born in the United States, but in Kenya, his father's hometown.

During the last presidential election, in September 2016, due to pressure from headwinds, he reluctantly broke the conspiracy theory, saying, "Obama was born in the United States."

Under the current Article 14 of the U.S. Amendment, anyone born in the United States becomes a U.S. citizen, regardless of the nationality of the parents.

US media reports that Harris is a US-born citizen born in October 1964 in Oakland, California.

In an article titled "Trump's involvement in elections threatens democracy in the United States," CNN said, "Don't mind the intervention of Russia, China and Iran. The most dangerous threat to the integrity of the November presidential election is pledged to protect it." It comes from one US president,” he criticized.

President Trump is also caught in controversy by throwing a ``fighting offense'' such as writing ``bad'' against Congressman Harris.

Biden Camp side strongly opposed the'conspiracy theory of birthplace', saying that it was an "obvious lie."

According to the WP, a spokesman for Biden Camp said in an email statement: "Donald Trump was a leader in the racist buzzer movement associated with former President Obama, and throughout his tenure every day he tried to fuel racism and tear the country to pieces." I was criticized.

"So it's not surprising," he said, criticizing President Trump's unsuccessful response to Corona 19 and criticizing that it is really disgusting for people around him to rely on clearly false lies while trying to divert people's attention.

Senator Lindsey Graham, a pro-Trump leader in the Republican Party, also clearly drew a line in the conspiracy theory.

In a tweet that day, he said there were many problems with disagreement with Congressman Harris, such as "Hugging a radical agenda," but he cut it off, saying, "There is no issue at all about whether she is a US citizen or not."

Congressman Harris was born in the United States in 1964 to parents who lived legally and is clearly a citizen of the United States.

However, President Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, senior white house aide, said in an interview on CBS that day, "I just don't know if it's right or wrong. I don't know if that's what inspires." "It's a story that comes out," he said, "covering" and agreeing.

However, as Congressman Harris continued to be asked whether he would undoubtedly accept that he had the right to vote under Article 14 of the US Constitution, he stepped back, saying, "Personally, there is no reason to believe she has no right to vote."

(Photo = Getty Image Korea)