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Senior Merz ally under pressure in Germany over surrogate baby

By Thomson Reuters Jul 17, 2026 | 11:08 AM

BERLIN, July 17 (Reuters) – A senior member of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s ruling conservatives faced pressure to resign on Friday after having a baby born through a surrogate mother ​in the United States, contrary to his own party’s ‌opposition to surrogacy.

Jens Spahn, the parliamentary leader of Merz’s Christian Democrat party and its sister Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU), drew heavy criticism after news emerged that he had become a parent with his husband through a surrogate mother.

“I wrestled ‌with ​myself for a long time, including on ⁠the subject of surrogacy. ⁠I was torn for a long time,” he told the mass market Bild daily on Friday.

Surrogacy is prohibited in Germany, although it is not illegal to bring up a child born ​of a surrogate mother outside Germany.

The CDU voted to uphold the ban on surrogacy inside Germany at its party conference in ⁠February, and the news about Spahn’s ⁠move to use a surrogate in the United States ​prompted calls from some in the party for Spahn to step ​down.

“Jens Spahn is no longer fit to remain as leader ‌of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group and must resign,” Daniel Peters, the head of the CDU in the eastern state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern told Bild.

Spahn said he would discuss his position with members of ⁠his parliamentary group.

The episode was the latest in a series that have underlined the sensitivity of the surrogacy issue in Europe, with the interests ⁠of would-be parents ‌unable to have children coming up against those ⁠who say the practice is exploitative.

Italian Prime Minister ​Giorgia Meloni ‌once described surrogacy as “inhuman” and her government made ​it illegal ⁠to seek surrogacy abroad. France and Spain also ban surrogacy.

Merz said the story was deeply affecting many people in Germany “in all its dimensions – human, legal, social and ethical” but he added that he saw no reason for the law to change.

(Reporting by James Mackenzie; editing ​by Philippa Fletcher)