Luis Ramon Morales-Santana asks us to review a March 3, 2011 decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying his motion to reopen his removal proceedings relating to his claim of deriva-five citizenship. Under the statute in effect when Morales-Santana was born — the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (the “1952 Act”) — a child born abroad to an unwed citizen mother and non-citizen father has citizenship at birth so long as the mother was present in the United States or one of its outlying possessions for a continuous period of at least one year at some point prior to the child’s birth. See 1952 Act, § 309(c), 66 Stat. 163, 238-39 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1409(c) (1952)).
BACKGROUND
I. Facts
The following undisputed facts are drawn from the record on appeal. Morales-Santana’s father, Jose Dolores Morales, was born in Puerto Rico on March 19, 1900 and acquired United States citizenship in 1917 pursuant to the Jones Act. See Jones Act of Puerto Rico, ch. 145, 39 Stat. 951 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1402 (1917)). He was physically present in Puerto Rico until February 27, 1919, 20 days before his nineteenth birthday, when he left Puerto Rico to work in the Dominican Republic for the South Porto Rico Sugar Company.
In 1962 Morales-Santana was born in the Dominican Republic to his father and his Dominican mother. Morales-Santana was what is statutorily described as “legiti-mat[ed]” by his father upon his parents’ marriage in 1970 and admitted to the United States as a lawful permanent resident in 1975. 8 U.S.C. § 1409(a). Morales-Santana’s father died in 1976.
II. Statutory Framework
Unlike citizenship by naturalization, derivative citizenship exists as of a child’s birth or not at all. See 8 U.S.C. § 1409(a), (c); cf. id. § 1101(a)(23). The law in effect at the time of birth governs whether a child obtained derivative citizenship as of his or her birth. See Ashton v. Gonzales,
As noted, the 1952 Act limits the ability of an unwed citizen father to confer citizenship on his child born abroad — where the child’s mother is not a citizen at the time of the child’s birth — more stringently than it limits the ability of a similarly situated unwed citizen mother to do the same. Compare 8 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(7), with id. § 1409(c).
III. Procedural History
In 2000 Morales-Santana was placed in removal proceedings after having been convicted of various felonies. He applied for withholding of removal on the basis of derivative citizenship obtained through his father. An immigration judge denied the application. In 2010 Morales-Santana
DISCUSSION
Morales-Santana makes four arguments for derivative citizenship: (1) that his father’s physical absence from the United States during the 20 days directly prior to his father’s nineteenth birthday constituted a de minimis “gap” in physical presence, and that such gaps should not count against a finding of physical presence for purposes of § 1401(a)(7); (2) that the South Porto Rico Sugar Company, which employed his father after his father moved to the Dominican Republic, was a multinational United States-owned company and therefore effectively part of the United States government or an international organization as defined in 22 U.S.C. § 288, see 1966 Act to Amend the Immigration and Nationality Act (the “1966 Act”), 80 Stat. 1322 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(7) (1966)) (counting periods of employment for certain organizations toward the statute’s physical presence requirements); (3) that at the time his father moved to the Dominican Republic it was an “outlying possession” of the United States; and (4) as noted, that the different physical presence requirements applicable to unwed fathers and unwed mothers under the 1952 Act violate equal protection.
Consistent with our obligation to avoid constitutional questions if possible, we first address Morales-Santana’s three statutory arguments for derivative citizenship. See Escambia Cnty., Fla. v. McMillan,
As to both his statutory and constitutional arguments, we review de novo the question of Morales-Santana’s derivative citizenship. See Phong Thanh Nguyen v. Chertoff,
I. Statutory Arguments
Morales-Santana contends that his father’s absence from the United States during the 20 days prior to his father’s nineteenth birthday constitutes a de minimis “gap” in his father’s physical presence and that such gaps should not be held against someone who claims to have satisfied the 1952 Act’s physical presence requirement. In support, Morales-Santana points to continuous physical presence requirements under the immigration laws that explicitly excuse de minimis absences. See, e.g., id. § 1229b(b)(1)(A), (d)(2) (2012) (absences of 90. continuous days or fewer do not break “continuity” of physical presence for purposes of cancellation of removal for a lawful permanent resident..); id. §§ 1255(l)(3), 1255a(a)(3)(B). By its plain terms, § 1401(a)(7) had no similar exception. In any event, because Morales-Santana’s father left the United States and its outlying possessions 20 days prior to his nineteenth birthday and never returned, there was no “gap” in his father’s physical presence that bridged two periods of physical presence. So even if we recognized an exception to the physical presence requirement in § 1401 for de minimis “gaps,” we would reject Morales-Santana’s claim on this basis.
Relying on the 1966 Act, Morales-Santana next argues thaf his father’s em
As his final statutory argument, Morales-Santana contends that the Dominican Republic was an “outlying possession” of the United States for purposes of the 1952 Act when Morales-Santana’s father was there in 1919. Two factors convince us that Congress did not intend to include the Dominican Republic within the scope of the term “outlying possession” in § 1401.
First, there is no treaty or lease pursuant to which the Dominican Republic was acquired. This stands in contrast to the Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, all of which were acquired by the United States by treaty, see Treaty of Peace between the United States and the Kingdom of Spain, 30 Stat. 1754 (1899); Convention between the United States and Denmark, 39 Stat. 1706 (1917), and all of which were outlying possessions when the United States exercised sovereignty over them, see Matter of V- 9 I. & N. Dec. 558, 561 (1962); Matter of Y-, 7 I. & N. Dec. 667, 668 (1958). The case of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba is a little different in that it involves both a lease and a treaty, but it yields the same result vis-a-vis the Dominican Republic. In Boumediene v. Bush,
Having rejected Morales-Santana’s statutory arguments for derivative citizenship, we now consider his constitutional equal protection argument.
II. Equal Protection
Morales-Santana argues principally that the 1952 Act’s treatment of derivative citizenship conferral rights violates the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection.
As both parties agree, had Morales-Santana’s mother, rather than his father, been a citizen continuously present in Puerto Rico until 20 days prior to her nineteenth birthday, she would have satisfied the requirements to confer derivative citizenship on her child. It is this gender-based difference in treatment that Morales-Santana claims violated his father’s right to equal protection.
The Government asserts that the difference is justified by two interests: (1) ensuring a sufficient connection between citizen children and the United States, and
A. Level of Scrutiny
We apply intermediate, “heightened” scrutiny to laws that discriminate on the basis of gender. United States v. Virginia,
In urging us to apply rational basis scrutiny instead, the Government relies on Fiallo v. Bell,
But Fiallo is distinguishable. In Fiallo, the children’s alienage implicated Congress’s “exceptionally broad power” to admit or remove non-citizens. Fiallo,
Our view of Fiallo’s limited scope is grounded in Supreme Court and circuit caselaw. As an initial matter, we note that the Supreme Court has never applied the deferential Fiallo standard to issues of gender discrimination under § 1409, despite being asked to do so on at least three occasions. See Miller v. Albright,
Although no opinion in Miller received a majority of votes, we observed in Lake v. Reno that “seven justices in Miller would have applied heightened scrutiny ... [to INA] section 309(a).”
For these reasons, we conclude that the gender-based scheme in §§ 1401 and 1409 can be upheld only if the Government shows that it is substantially related to an actual and important governmental objective. See Virginia,
B. Governmental Interests and Tailoring
Having determined that intermediate scrutiny applies, we examine the two interests that the Government claims support the statute’s gender-based distinction.
1. Ensuring a Sufficient Connection Between the Child and the United States
The Government asserts that Congress passed the 1952 Act’s physical presence requirements in order to “ensur[e] that foreign-born children of parents of different nationalities have a sufficient connection to the United States to warrant citizenship.” Respondent’s Br. 38-39. As both parties agree, this interest is important, and Congress actually had it in mind when requiring some period of physical presence before a citizen parent could confer citizenship on his or her child born abroad. See Petitioner’s Br. 35 n. 17 (citing Weedin v. Chin Bow,
The Government invokes this important interest but fails to justify the 1952 Act’s different treatment of mothers and fathers by reference to it. It offers no reason, and we see no reason, that unwed fathers need more time than unwed mothers in the United States prior to their child’s birth in order to assimilate the values that the statute seeks to ensure are passed on to citizen children born abroad.
We recognize that our determination conflicts with the decision of the Ninth Circuit in Flores-Villar,
Instead, the Government relies on Nguyen to explain why the different physical presence requirements for unwed men and women reflect a concern with ensuring an adequate connection between the child and the United States. We are not persuaded. In Nguyen, the Court upheld the Immigration and Nationality Act’s requirement that a citizen father seeking to confer derivative citizenship on his foreign-born child take the affirmative step of either legitimating the child, declaring paternity under oath, or obtaining a court order of paternity.
The first interest, “assuring that a biological parent-child relationship exists,” Nguyen,
The Nguyen Court identified a second interest in ensuring “that the child and the citizen parent have some demonstrated opportunity or potential to develop” a “real, meaningful relationship.” Nguyen,
So we agree that unwed mothers and fathers are not similarly situated with respect to the two types of parent-to-child “ties” justifying the legitimation requirement at issue in Nguyen. But unwed mothers and fathers are similarly situated with respect to how long they should be present in the United States or an outlying possession prior to the child’s birth in order to have assimilated citizenship-related values to transmit to the child. Therefore, the statute’s gender-based distinction is not substantially related to the goal of ensuring a sufficient connection between citizen children and the United States.
2. Preventing Statelessness
Having concluded that the Government’s interest in establishing a connection between the foreign-born child and the United States does not explain or justify the gender-based distinction in the 1952 Act’s physical presence requirements, we now turn to the Government’s other asserted interest. The Government argues that Congress enacted different physical presence requirements in § 1409(a) (incorporating § 1401(a)(7)) and § 1409(c) to reduce the level of statelessness among newborns. For example, a child born out of wedlock abroad may be stateless if he is born inside a country that does not confer citizenship based on place of birth and neither of the child’s parents conferred derivative citizenship on him.
The avoidance of statelessness is clearly an important governmental interest. See Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez,
Some historical background is useful to understand Congress’s purpose in establishing the 1952 Act’s gender-based physical presence requirements. Until 1940, a citizen father whose child was born abroad transmitted his citizenship to that child if the father had resided in the United States for any period of time prior to the child’s birth. See Rogers v. Bellei,
In 1940 Congress for the first time explicitly addressed the situation of children born out of wedlock. It enacted Section 205 of the 1940 Act,
Neither the congressional hearings nor the relevant congressional reports concerning the 1940 Act contain any reference to the problem of statelessness for children born abroad.
Based on our review of the Executive Branch’s explanatory comments and the Sandifer article, we decline the Government’s invitation. The explanatory comments do not mention statelessness and do not refer to the Sandifer article’s discussion of statelessness. In any event, the Sandifer article itself does not support the Government’s argument that the children of unwed citizen mothers faced a greater risk of statelessness than the children of unwed citizen fathers.
While the Executive Branch’s comments ignore the problem of statelessness, they arguably reflect gender-based generalizations concerning who would care for and be associated with a child born out of
In sum, we discern no evidence (1) that Congress enacted the 1952 Act’s gender-based physical presence requirements out of a concern for statelessness, (2) that the problem of statelessness was in fact greater for children of unwed citizen mothers than for children of unwed citizen fathers, or (3) that Congress believed that the problem of statelessness was greater for children of unwed citizen mothers than for children of unwed citizen fathers. We conclude that neither reason nor history supports the Government’s contention that the 1952 Act’s gender-based physical presence requirements were motivated by a concern for statelessness, as opposed to impermissible stereotyping.
b. Substantial Relationship Between Ends and Means
Even assuming for the sake of argument that preventing statelessness was Congress’s actual motivating concern when it enacted the physical presence requirements, we are persuaded by the availability of effective gender-neutral alternatives that the gender-based distinction between § 1409(a) (incorporating § 1401(a)(7)) and § 1409(c) cannot survive intermediate scrutiny. See Wengler,
PROPOSED AMENDMENT ...
(d) A child hereafter born out of wedlock beyond the limits and jurisdiction of the United States and its outlying possessions to an American parent who has resided in the United States and its outlying possessions, there being no other legal parent under the law of the place of birth, shall have the nationality of such American parent.
Letter from Sec’y Hull to Chairman Dick-stein (Mar. 27, 1933) (Respondent’s May 8, 2013 Supp. Br. Ex. B).
For these reasons, the gender-based distinction at the heart of the 1952 Act’s physical presence requirements is not substantially related to the achievement of a permissible, non-stereotype-based objective.
3. Remedy
We now turn to the most vexing problem in this case. Here, two statutory provisions— § 1409(c) and (a)
As we see it, “equal treatment” might be achieved in any one of three ways: (1) striking both § 1409(c) and (a) entirely; (2) severing the one-year continuous presence provision in § 1409(c) and requiring every unwed citizen parent to satisfy the more onerous ten-year requirement if the other parent lacks citizenship; or (3) severing the ten-year requirement in §§ 1409(a) and 1401(a)(7) and requiring every unwed citizen parent to satisfy the less
We eliminate the first option with ease. The 1952 Act contains a severance clause that provides: “If any particular provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the remainder of the Act ... shall not be affected thereby.” 1952 Act § 406; cf. Nguyen,
We reject the second option — contracting, as opposed to extending, the right to derivative citizenship — with more circumspection. The Government urges us to adopt this option, arguing that the alternative allows the exception for unwed mothers to swallow the rule, thereby inflicting more damage to the statute’s language and structure and reflecting a more radical change than the 1952 Congress intended. This argument fails for two reasons. First, the argument misunderstands our task, which is not to devise the “cleanest” way to alter the wording and structure of the statute, but to determine what result Congress intended in the event the combined statutory provisions were deemed unconstitutional. Second, the Government’s argument neglects the historical background against which Congress enacted the relevant provisions. Although a close call, history does not convince us that the members of Congress passing the 1952 Act would have viewed the extension of the one-year requirement as a more radical change than the alternative, in which all unwed citizen parents must satisfy the ten-year age-calibrated requirement if the other parent lacks citizenship. To the contrary, the ten-year requirement for fathers and married mothers imposed by Congress in 1940 appears to have represented a significant departure from long-established historical practice. See Rogers,
Neither the text nor the legislative history of the 1952 Act is especially helpful or clear on this point, and ultimately what tips the balance for us is the binding precedent that cautions us to extend rather than contract benefits in the face of ambiguous congressional intent. See, e.g., Westcott, 443 U.S. at. 89,
Lastly, the Government contends that, in giving Morales-Santana the relief he seeks, we are granting citizenship, which we lack the power to do. This argument rests on a mistaken premise. Although courts have no power to confer “citizenship on a basis other than that prescribed by Congress,” Miller,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the BIA’s decision and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Unless otherwise noted, references to §§ 1401 and 1409 are to those sections as they appear in the 1952 Act, and references to other statutory provisions are to those sections as they appear in the current codification.
. Section 1401(a)(7) provided:
The following shall be nationals and citizens of the United States at birth: ... a person born outside the geographical limits of the United States and its outlying possessions of parents one of whom is an alien, and the other a citizen of the United States who, prior to the birth of such person, was physically present in the United States or its outlying possessions for a period or periods totaling not less than ten years, at least five of which were after attaining the age of fourteen years....
Section 1409(a) provided that § 1401(a)(7) “shall apply as of the date of birth to a child born out of wedlock on or after the effective date of this Act," provided that paternity is established “by legitimation” before the child turns 21. Section 1409(c) provided:
Notwithstanding the provision of subsection (a) of this section, a person born, on or after the effective date of this Act, outside the United States and out of wedlock shall be held to have acquired at birth the nationality status of his mother, if the mother had the nationality of the United States at the time of such person's birth, and if the mother had previously been physically present in the United States or one of its outlying possessions for a continuous period of one year.
. In addition to satisfying the requirements of § 1401(a)(7), the father must establish his paternity through legitimation of the child before the child turns 21. See 8 U.S.C. § 1409(a). As both parties agree, Morales-Santana’s father legitimated his son in 1970. Morales-Santana does not contest the statute’s legitimation requirement, and that requirement is not at issue on appeal. See Nguyen v. INS,
. Congress did not define "outlying possessions” until the Nationality Act of 1940, which defined "outlying possessions” as "all territory ... over which the United States exercises rights of sovereignty, except the Canal Zone.” See § 101(e), 54 Stat. 1137 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 501(e) (1940)). The 1952 Act defined the term to include only “American Samoa and Swains Island.” 101(a)(29), 66 Stat. 170 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(29) (1952)).
. Morales-Santana has standing to assert this equal protection claim on behalf of his father since Morales-Santana alleges that his father suffered an injury in fact, that his father bears a close relation to him, and that his father’s ability to assert his own interests is hindered because his father is deceased. See Campbell v. Louisiana,
. As noted, the father must also satisfy a legitimation requirement. See 8 U.S.C. § 1409(a).
. For brevity, we refer to these as constituting a "legitimation requirement,” though legitimation is just one of three ways of satisfying the statutory provision.
. In 1934 Congress granted citizen mothers, whether married or unmarried, the right to confer citizenship on their children bom abroad if the mother satisfied the same minimal residency requirement applicable to citizen fathers. See Act of May 24, 1934, ch. 344, § 1, 48 Stat. 797.
. Cf. Kristin A. Collins, Illegitimate Borders: Jus Sanguinis Citizenship and the Legal Construction of Family, Race, and Nation, 123 Yale LJ. 2134, 2205 n. 283 (2014) ("[I]n the many hundreds of pre-1940 administrative memos Í have read that defend or explain recognition of the nonmarital foreign-born children of American mothers as citizens, I have identified exactly one memo by a U.S. official that mentions the risk of statelessness for the foreign-born nonmarital children of American mothers as a concern.” (citing Memorandum from Green Hackworth, Office of the Solicitor, U.S. Dep’t of State, to Richard Flournoy, Office of the Solicitor, U.S. Dep’t of State (Aug. 14, 1928) (on file with National Archives and Records Administration, Relevant Group 59, Central Decimal File 131))).
.The Government does cite one congressional report in which statelessness was mentioned in conjunction with the 1952 Act. A Senate Report dated January 29, 1952 mentions the problem of statelessness-in explaining why the 1952 Act eliminated a provision in the 1940 Act that had conditioned a citizen mother's ability to transmit nationality to her child on the father's failure to legitimate the child prior to the child's eighteenth birthday. See 1940 Act, § 205,
Although the Report reflects congressional awareness of statelessness as a problem, it does not purport to justify the gender-based distinctions in the physical presence provisions at issue in this appeal.
. Contrary to the Government’s assertion, the Sandifer article does not indicate that it was "conducted by the State Department.” Rather, Sandifer, who worked at the State Department at the time he wrote the article, explains at the outset that he decided to write it at the suggestion of a colleague, not pursuant to an official directive. See Sandifer, Comparative Study, 29 Am. J. Int'l L. at 248.
. In response to our order requesting supplemental briefing on the issue, the Government was unable to furnish any other evidence that Congress enacted or the Executive encouraged the 1940 Act’s or the 1952 Act’s gender-based physical presence requirements due to concerns about statelessness.
. The comments reflect the view that the mother "is bound to maintain” “custody and control of ... a child [born out of wedlock] as against the putative father” as its "natural guardian” and that "[t]he mother, as guardian by nurture, has the right to the custody and control of her bastard child.” 76th Cong. 431 (quotation marks omitted); see also Collins,
. See Collins,
. In 1936, an Executive Branch official who participated in drafting the 1940 Act recognized that "Section 204 [of the 1940 Act] as drawn up by the Committee slightly discriminates in favor of women.” Letter from John J. Scanlon to Ruth B. Shipley, U.S. Dep’t of State (Mar. 7, 1936) (Petitioner’s Nov. 14, 2014 Supp. Br. Ex. 4); see also Collins,
. As we have already noted, the burden is actually impossible for eighteen-year-old unwed citizen fathers to satisfy.
. We note once more that our conclusion differs from that of the Ninth Circuit in Flores-Villar. There the Ninth Circuit assumed, sub silentio, that Congress's enactment of the physical presence requirements was actually motivated by concern for reduction in the risk of statelessness. It also nominally assumed, without deciding, that intermediate scrutiny applied. See
.Recall that § 1409(a) incorporates the physical presence requirement from § 1401(a)(7), which applies to married parents of mixed citizenship.
. When applied to unmarried parents, § 1401(a)(7) as modified would read:
a person bom outside the geographical limits of the United States and its outlying possessions of parents one of whom is an alien, and the other a citizen of the United States who, prior to the birth of such person, was physically present in the United States or its outlying possessions for a continuous period of one year: Provided, That any periods of honorable service in the Armed Forces of the United States by such citizen parent may be included in computing the physical presence requirements of this paragraph.
(first emphasis added to reflect change).
