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Trans dad Freddy McConnell from Deal who does not want to be registered as 'mother' awaits appeal ruling

By: Eleanor Perkins

Published: 07:53, 29 April 2020

Updated: 08:09, 29 April 2020

A transgender man fighting to be named the father on his child's birth certificate should find out if he has won a Court of Appeal fight today.

Journalist Freddy McConnell, from Deal, carried his child and wants to be registered as 'father' or 'parent' on the official document.

Freddy McConnell from Deal would like to be registered as his child's 'father' Picture: Instagram @seahorsefilm

He says forcing him to register as the child’s 'mother' breaches his human right to respect for private and family life.

Mr McConnell mounted an appeal after a judge ruled against him in September, following a High Court trial in London.

Sir Andrew McFarlane, the president of the Family Division of the High Court and most senior family court judge in England and Wales, concluded that people who had given birth were legally mothers, regardless of their gender, and said there was a “material difference between a person’s gender and their status as a parent”.

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Three appeal judges are due to publish their ruling today.

Lord Burnett, the Lord Chief Justice and most senior judge in England and Wales, Lady Justice King and Lord Justice Singh, considered arguments at a Court of Appeal hearing in London in March.

A view of The Royal Courts of Justice Picture: iStockphoto

Judges have heard how Mr McConnell is a single parent who was born a woman but now lives as a man following surgery.

Mr McConnell was biologically able to get pregnant and give birth but legally became a man when the child was born.

He wanted to be registered as father or parent but a registrar told him that the law required people who give birth to be registered as mothers.

Mr McConnell took legal action against the General Register Office, which administers the registration of births and deaths in England and Wales.

Lawyers say the child will be the first person born in England and Wales not to legally have a mother if Mr McConnell wins.

Freddy McConnell shared his story in an article in the Guardian in 2019 Picture: Instagram @seahorsefilm

Last July, the star of BBC documentary Seahorse, lost a court case to protect his privacy during the trial.

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He argued that he shouldn't be named in the media for fear he and his child could be victimised and bullied.

However, editors joined hands to request that order was lifted, arguing that Mr McConnell had been co-operating with a documentary about his experiences.

Seahorse, which aired in September 2019, documents Mr McConnell's conception journey, pregnancy and birth of his child.

The film uses his real name, although there is no reference to his claim to be registered as the child’s father.

Read more: All the latest news from Deal

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