So far as I am aware, no strand of DNA has ever gestated a fetus and carried it to term. No strand of DNA has comforted a sick child, taken her to her first day of school, put a dollar under the pillow for the Tooth Fairy, wrapped presents, or sent a child to college and watched her become an adult.
Attaching this denial based on so-called "biological" grounds to the mere doubt about whether the DNA belongs to one or two U.S. citizens (when the odds are nearly overwhelming that at least one of the donors was a citizen) apparently makes that the sole determining factor. The equally "biological" fact that the mother, who carried the child to term with the intention of being its mother, is completely ignored. Allowing a magic molecule, by itself, to confer or deny citizenship would create absurdities, such as a "natural born citizen" born abroad to two non-citizen parents with no connection whatsoever to the United States.
In the case of married couples, in jurisdictions including California, the genetic identity of the father is absolutely irrelevant, and there is an irrebuttable presumption that the husband is the father (
Michael H. v. Gerald D. upheld the constitutionality of such a presumption). So husbands are entitled to a bright line rule in their favor, at least domestically.
Any rational analysis of parenthood has to address more complex questions than the presence or absence of a magic molecule. A bright line may be easy to analyze and it certainly makes it easy to decide cases. In the example of parentage, it makes it very easy to decide cases horribly wrongly and with tragic consequences.
While most disputes about IVF and other similar technologies erupt into litigation in the context of surrogate parentage, there is no reason the existence of a parent-child relationship is irrelevant in other contexts, such as that in this case. Just as I would no longer see the offspring of a stolen fertilized egg be considered a citizen when born to and raised by two people with no other connection to the United States (especially as the market in fertilized eggs may become global), I see no rational reason to deny citizenship to the child of an American citizen for the absence of such a genetic relationship.
Rational jurisdictions that have looked at the issue of parentage in this context have addressed it as the complex, multi-factored analysis it actually is in reality. We are not talking about molecules here, but of human beings. For example, New Jersey's Parentage Act:
Quote:
"The Act defines the "parent and child relationship" as "the legal relationship existing between a child and the child's natural or adoptive parents, incident to which the law confers or imposes rights, privileges, duties, and obligations. It includes the mother and child relationship and the father and child relationship." N.J.S.A. 9:17-39. There are several means by which to establish a parental relationship under the Act: (1) genetic contribution, N.J.S.A. 9:17-41; (2) gestational primacy, i.e., giving birth, N.J.S.A. 9:17-41(a); or (3) adoption, N.J.S.A. 9:17-41(c). In addition, a rebuttable presumption of paternity derives from the parties' legal relationship, i.e., marriage or its equivalent, when a child is born during the course of a marriage or within 300 days of its termination. N.J.S.A. 9:17-43(a)(1). This presumption, that a man is the father of a child born to his wife, extends to a husband who consents to his wife being inseminated with donor sperm under the supervision of a licensed physician. N.J.S.A. 9:17-44(a) (the Artificial Insemination Statute).
In re T.J.S., 16 A.3d 386, 390-391 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2011) (addressing rights of gestational surrogate mother and finding them not extinguished by gestational surrogacy agreement requiring mother to seek adoption). Note that in this case, the egg did not belong to the non-surrogate mother seeking parental status.
In this case, we cannot poll the anonymous sperm and egg donor. They effectively do not exist. The only person whose intent we know is that of the American citizen mother, who gave birth to a child with the intent of being its parent. The child is born to an American mother. The rule proposed by the State Department would make non-citizens of the children of any American using IVF with a fertilized egg not her own, solely based on the accidental location of birth, such as if she happened to give birth abroad after her flight was delayed.
It would also make the silly specter of birthers a potential reality: that is, an army of foreign-born "natural born citizens" who never had a connection in their lives to the United States other than a stolen fertilized egg. I imagine there are some wealthy foreigners out there who wouldn't mind buying a natural born American citizen child in this manner.