Unfortunate but as the way the law is written, the outcome appears to be correct. The courts will figure it out.
I am sure that the courts will sort it out. But unfortunately this is what happens when the courts do sort things rather than when they go through the proper legislative route. Things like this are the result of the failure of Congress to sort out the mess that the Supreme Court makes when it expands rights. The court doesn't realize all of the areas of the law that the homophobia touched.
From what I have read so far, it seems like this has less to do with homophobia, and more to do with U.S. citizenship law not anticipating the realities of "assisted reproductive technology".
The U.S. Department of State determines whether a child born abroad to a U.S. citizen parent acquired U.S. citizenship at birth
A child born abroad may acquire U.S. citizenship at birth if the parent/parents of the child meet the conditions prescribed in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
The U.S. Department of State interprets the INA to mean that a child born abroad must be biologically related to a U.S. citizen parent who meets the following statutory transmission requirements of INA 301 or 309 in order for the child to acquire U.S. citizenship at birth:
A U.S. citizen father must be the genetic parent of the child and meet all other statutory requirements in order to transmit U.S. citizenship to the child at birth.
A U.S. citizen mother must be the genetic and/or the gestational* and legal mother of the child at the time and place of the child’s birth and must meet all other statutory requirements in order to transmit U.S. citizenship to the child at birth. (*Gestational mother is the woman who carries and gives birth to the child)
https://travel.state.gov/content/tr...oductive-Technology-ART-Surrogacy-Abroad.html
...if I were a Norwegian citizen and my husband was an American citizen and we came to get citizenship for our twins, I seriously DOUBT they will require DNA tests to PROVE my husband fathered both children. I could have had an affair, or had artificial insemination without my husband's sperm.
This is exactly the point these parents (and others like them) are making. Where existing law/interpretation is problematic is that the typical heterosexual married couple will not be questioned, whereas it is biologically obvious that a donor and/or surrogate was used for a same-sex couple.
How do they know the egg donor wasn't American? It does not say the surrogate was the egg donor and most likely she was not.
This is an excellent point, and the article does not indicate whether the American Consulate official even asked this question. However, according to the the article cited about, a "U.S. citizen mother must be the genetic and/or the gestational*
and legal mother of the child at the time and place of the child’s birth".
Since the birth mother was a surrogate, and never the "legal mother" of the baby, the baby doesn't meet the requirements for automatic citizenship.
This would apply to a heterosexual couple, too... if they were ever asked.
Interestingly, adopted children
automatically receive U.S. citizenship if the parents reside in the U.S. with the child. The process does take two years, though.
http://www.alllaw.com/articles/nolo...gn-born-adopted-children-get-citizenship.html