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While other Republican presidential candidates have kept their distance on the issue, Perry deeply waded into the topic in an interview published over the weekend in Parade magazine. He was quoted as saying that he has "no reason to believe" that Obama was not born in the United States. He also said he still wasn't sure if Obama's birth certificate is legit.
"I don't have a definitive answer," Perry said in that interview. And when it was suggested that Perry -- and the world -- had seen Obama's birth certificate, Perry said: "I don't know. Have I?"
Then, in an interview with CNBC and The New York Times, Perry said the birth certificate question was "a good issue to keep alive."
"It's fun to poke him a little bit," Perry said.
And by Tuesday, Perry refused in South Carolina to answer a reporter's direct question about whether he believed Obama when he offered proof -- in the form of a birth certificate -- that he was born in Hawaii.
"I'll cut you off right there," Perry said when asked about Obama's birth certificate. "That is one of the biggest distractions that there is going. We need to be talking about jobs."
Perry also offered to release his own birth certificate, saying: "If somebody wants to see my birth certificate, I'd be happy to show it to them," Perry said. "But the fact is that this is a distraction, and Americans really don't care about that, if you want to know the truth of the matter."
[Associated
Press;
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