Senior Merz ally resigns after coming under pressure in Germany over surrogate baby


FILE PHOTO: Chairman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group Jens Spahn delivers a speech during a session of Germany's lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, in Berlin, Germany June 11, 2026. REUTERS/Nadja Wohlleben/ File Photo

BERLIN, July 18 (Reuters) - ⁠Jens Spahn, a senior member of Germany's ruling ⁠conservatives, resigned on Saturday after having a ‌baby born to a surrogate mother in the United States, a move at odds with his own party's opposition to ​surrogacy, according to a letter seen ⁠by Reuters.

Spahn, 46, the ⁠parliamentary leader of Chancellor Friedrich 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.

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

"Over the past few days, I ⁠have come to realise that my ​personal happiness — starting a family with my husband and becoming a father — is incompatible with my political ⁠office," Spahn wrote in the resignation letter.

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 U.S. prompted numerous calls ​from within the party for ‌Spahn to step down.

(Reporting by ​Andreas Rinke and James Mackenzie; Writing by Tom Sims; Editing by Alison Williams, Aidan Lewis)

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