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In an email to members of another committee of which she is a member, the Oireachtas Children’s Committee, Keogan said she was resigning as a member but was remaining on the International Surrogacy Committee. Keogan said a comment she made to a representative of the Irish Gay Dads group was “misinterpreted”. Keogan was subsequently asked to leave the meeting. Independent Senator Lynn Ruane told the meeting last week that members of the committee should not oppose matters because of “personal bigotry” but should “critically engage” with a topic. Keogan claims that “the tone of the meeting changed” following Cohalan’s remarks and that several members subsequently referred to her words as “inflammatory”.
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In a letter sent to Jennifer Whitmore of the Social Democrats, the chair of the committee, Keogan rejected that her comments were inflammatory and took issue with “this characterisation of my words”. “Inflammatory language, and using undefined terms don’t benefit the debate,” she said. The committee had been hearing evidence from witnesses with experience of surrogacy, including those who had had children conceived using assisted human reproduction.įollowing Keogan’s contribution, Elaine Cohalan of the Assisted Human Reproduction Coalition urged committee members to use respectful language. The meeting follows on from the last week’s controversial meeting where Independent Senator Sharon Keogan said she “does not believe it is everyone’s right to have a child”. The Oireachtas Joint Committee on International Surrogacy met today to focus on issues faced by same sex couples, both male and female, entering international surrogacy arrangements and achieving parental recognition. REPRESENTATIVES FROM THE Irish Gay Dads group have “implored” the Government to take action to make sure that families that are created through surrogacy “are not left behind” and treated as “second-class citizens in their own country”.