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Hubig advocates shared motherhood for female couples

Hubig advocates shared motherhood for female couples
The law of descent does not currently provide for co-motherhood Source: Fernando Gutierrez-Juarez/dpa

Federal Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig believes that family law should reflect realities. For her, this includes shared motherhood for two women. The traffic light coalition had delayed a corresponding reform.

Federal Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig would like to make it possible for lesbian couples with children to have joint parenthood from the very beginning. "Personally, I can imagine that we could establish a provision in the law of parentage for joint motherhood for female couples," the SPD politician told the German Press Agency.

The current legal situation is that the partner of the woman who gives birth to the child must adopt the child to become the legal parent. "This route via the court-ordered adoption process is very arduous and places a burden on families," the minister criticized. Furthermore, this regulation could have dire consequences for the child if the mother dies during or shortly after birth: "Then the child may have no parent at all."

The Federal Ministry of Justice already had concrete plans for co-motherhood in the fall of 2024. However, after the collapse of the traffic light coalition, these plans were not implemented. The coalition agreement between the CDU, CSU, and SPD does not provide for any changes to the law of parentage in this regard. In general, any reforms to family law will be "guided by the best interests of the child," it states only in rather general terms.

However, Hubig believes a change in this area makes sense, also with reference to pending cases regarding co-motherhood. "Several German courts consider the current law on parentage to be unconstitutional on this point," says the minister, who served as Minister of Education for Rhineland-Palatinate before moving to Berlin. She would like "to see us not wait until the Federal Constitutional Court sends us a request to do so before implementing meaningful reforms to family law."

The minister, however, considers the notarized "community of responsibility," another proposal by former Justice Minister Marco Buschmann (FDP), which was never implemented, to be dispensable. This was intended for people who are not in a romantic relationship but want to take responsibility for each other in everyday life. Buschmann cited single parents who support each other or single senior citizens who live together in a shared apartment as examples.

"At first, this sounded contemporary to many," said Hubig. However, the idea was apparently not fully developed. Feedback from society and academia had shown that no one needed this new legal institution. The added value would have been symbolic at best.

dpa/pfi
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