The Daily Telegraph

Transgende­r man cannot be ‘father’ to child

Refusal to replace ‘mother’ on birth certificat­e does not breach human rights, Supreme Court rules

- By Izzy Lyons and Dominic Penna

A TRANSGENDE­R man has failed in his Supreme Court bid to prevent his name being recorded as the “mother” on his child’s birth certificat­e.

Freddy Mcconnell, who was born a woman, wants to be registered as the “father” or “parent” on the certificat­e and claimed that documentin­g him as the “mother” breached his human rights.

Mr Mcconnell, a journalist in his 30s, took the case to the High Court last year and then later to the Court of Appeal. But his claim was dismissed at both hearings, with judges ruling he must appear as “mother” on the certificat­e.

Yesterday his legal challenge suffered further defeat after he was denied permission to mount an appeal at the Supreme Court on the grounds that the case did not raise “an arguable point of law”.

The refusal means Mr Mcconnell will not be able to take his case any further in the UK courts.

The landmark case arose after Mr Mcconnell became pregnant several weeks after legally transition­ing to become a man.

Having given birth, he was told by the General Register Office, which oversees the registrati­on of births in England, that the law required him to be registered as the baby’s mother.

Mr Mcconnell challenged the decision in a high-profile legal battle last year when senior judge Sir Andrew Mcfarlane threw out his claim, ruling that there was “a material difference between a person’s gender and their status as a parent”.

This was upheld in April in the Court of Appeal when Lord Chief Justice Burnett, the most senior judge in England and Wales, said that any changes to the current rules would be a matter for Members of Parliament, not the courts.

When the legal proceeding­s began in 2019, Mr Mcconnell was initially subject to an anonymity order.

But this was lifted when it emerged he had made a documentar­y called Seahorse about his attempts to get pregnant.

Had he been successful in his legal challenges, his child would have been the first person born in England and Wales who did not l egally have a mother.

In the UK, the Gender Recognitio­n Act requires anyone who gives birth to be registered as a mother regardless of the gender they choose to identify with.

Human rights campaigner­s and some lawyers expressed disappoint­ment at the decision made by the Supreme Court in response to the challenge.

Nancy Kelley, chief executive of the Stonewall, the LGBT charity, described the decision as “incredibly frustratin­g” and accused the Supreme Court of having “missed an opportunit­y to progress equality”.

She said: “Equality is not a luxury and this legislatio­n desperatel­y needs to be updated so trans parents can be recognised for who they are.”

Scott Halliday, an associate solicitor at the law firm Irwin Mitchell, said that the Supreme Court had “missed a oncein-a-generation opportunit­y to rectify a human rights breach”.

Discussion­s around the reform of gender legislatio­n are ongoing, with MPS currently considerin­g proposals that would mean transgende­r people did not need a medical diagnosis to change gender.

 ??  ?? Though born a woman, journalist Freddy Mcconnell wanted his baby’s birth certificat­e to record that he was the father, and not the mother
Though born a woman, journalist Freddy Mcconnell wanted his baby’s birth certificat­e to record that he was the father, and not the mother

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