A US territory's colonial history emerges in state disputes over voting and citizenship
Source: AP
Updated 12:49 PM EDT, June 7, 2025
WHITTIER, Alaska (AP) Squeezed between glacier-packed mountains and Alaskas Prince William Sound, the cruise-ship stop of Whittier is isolated enough that its reachable by just a single road, through a long, one-lane tunnel that vehicles share with trains. Its so small that nearly all its 260 residents live in the same 14-story condo building.
But Whittier also is the unlikely crossroads of two major currents in American politics: fighting over what it means to be born on U.S. soil and false claims by President Donald Trump and others that noncitizen voter fraud is widespread. In what experts describe as an unprecedented case, Alaska prosecutors are pursuing felony charges against 11 residents of Whittier, most of them related to one another, saying they falsely claimed U.S. citizenship when registering or trying to vote.
The defendants were all born in American Samoa, an island cluster in the South Pacific roughly halfway between Hawaii and New Zealand. Its the only U.S. territory where residents are not automatically granted citizenship by virtue of having been born on American soil, as the Constitution dictates.
Instead, by a quirk of geopolitical history, they are considered U.S. nationals a distinction that gives them certain rights and obligations while denying them others. American Samoans are entitled to U.S. passports and can serve in the military. Men must register for the Selective Service. They can vote in local elections in American Samoa but cannot hold public office in the U.S. or participate in most U.S. elections. Those who wish to become citizens can do so, but the process costs hundreds of dollars and can be cumbersome.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/american-samoa-voting-citizenship-alaska-trump-eda6c32ce0fcdca6edb22efac26e403d