The Law Commission has gone too far in its proposed guidelines for surrogate parents

Infertility can be deeply painful. There is a lot a compassionate society can – and should – do to make fertility treatment available to those who can be assisted to have a child with medical intervention. Few would disagree though that there are ethical boundaries to this, shaped by children’s interests, not just adult desires.

Last week, the Law Commission drove a coach and horses through that moral frontier – which it framed as an overdue modernisation of the law – by publishing draft proposals to reform the UK’s surrogacy framework. Implicit in them is the, I suspect controversial, assumption that a single man seeking to have a child alone through surrogacy, because he doesn’t want or can’t maintain a committed relationship, presents no greater moral quandary than a couple seeking IVF. How controversial is anyone’s guess: the Law Commission hasn’t canvassed public attitudes.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Novak Djokovic ‘lured to Australia to be humiliated’, says Serbia

Celebrities join politicians in condemning ‘political harassment’ of Belgrade-born tennis player Serb…

Israeli settlers rampage after Palestinian gunman kills two

One man killed and four wounded in worst outburst of settler violence…

Rapid help needed for Covid babies who fell behind, says former Ofsted chief

Labour highlights data showing children born in England during crisis were slower…

Plant-based diets crucial to saving global wildlife, says report

Vicious circle of cheap but damaging food is biggest destroyer of nature,…