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The Equal Rights Amendment

LWVUS Position in Brief:

  •  The League of Women Voters of the United States supports equal rights for all regardless of sex.

  • The League supports action to bring laws into compliance with the ERA: a) to eliminate or amend those laws that have the effect of discriminating on the basis of sex; b) to promote laws that support the goals of the ERA; c) to strengthen the enforcement of such existing laws. 

Where we are now:

The League of Women Voters has long been at the forefront in the battle to pass the Equal Rights Amendment. We were visible and active as supporters lobbied, marched, rallied, petitioned, picketed, went on hunger strikes, and committed acts of civil disobedience between 1972 and 1982. The ERA would simply and elegantly add a guarantee in the Constitution for equal legal rights for all Americans regardless of sex.

Now, the ERA has reached the 38 states to ratify the amendment, and has another hurdle to climb. That is a timeline set in 1972 to reach ratification by 1982, which was not met. Congress has denied our ratification of the ERA. The challenge now is to remove that deadline, for which there is precedent. There is a legal challenge from a few states that want to rescind their ratification.

Two different types of ERA legislation have been introduced in the current session of Congress:

  • Traditional legislation to ratify the ERA by the Constitution's Article V ratification process, and

  • "Three-state strategy" legislation to remove the time limit on the ERA's ratification process and declare it complete when three-fourths (38) of the states ratify, thereby retaining the existing 35 state ratifications as viable.

The LWVUS at its 2018 national convention passed the following motion in support of the effort:

Be it resolved that the LWVUS supports an emphasis on the ERA this year and every year until the ERA is ratified and becomes a U.S. Constitutional Amendment. Be it resolved that the LWVUS supports efforts to remove the time limits for ratification of the ERA.

 The Vote

from PBS

One hundred years after the passage of the 19th Amendment, The Vote tells the dramatic culmination story of the hard-fought campaign waged by American women for the right to vote — a transformative cultural and political movement that resulted in the largest expansion of voting rights in U.S. history.

Watch Part 1 of this PBS documentary.

From “When the Anti-Feminists Roared Back”

In Utah, the Mormon Church provided buses for 10,000 women to attend that state’s IWY meeting. The result? Participants passed resolutions against the ERA, in support of the dissolution of IWY, and considered endorsing the repeal of women’s suffrage. With feminism under siege, more radical women’s liberation activists, women who had held themselves aloof from reformist efforts, became increasingly involved in mainstream feminist battles.

Read more HERE:

ERA Resolution

EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT RESOLUTION

Utah Women Unite and House Sponsor Rep. Rebecca Chavez-Houck and Senate Sponsor Sen. Jim Dabakis have announced S.J.R. 10 Joint Resolution Ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment to the United States Constitution in the Utah 2017 Legislative Session. 

Top 6 reasons we need the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA):

1.       Unlike race or religion, sexual discrimination is NOT protected by the equal protections clause of the 14th amendment.

2.       Sex discrimination is held to a lower level of judicial scrutiny. This makes it very difficult to win cases, favors the discriminator, puts the burden of proof on the victim, leads to long and expensive legal battles on the backs of women already earning less than their male counterparts, and makes it difficult to file class action suits.

3.       Most of the Alt-Right fear-mongering scenarios about the "moral degradation" of society if the ERA passed, have almost all already happened and we still don't have an ERA (e.g., shared bathrooms, women working outside the home, gay marriage, women in military combat roles, etc.).

4.       Pro-Women activists, legislators, and organizations have to divert all of their educational, financial, and lobbying efforts every single legislative session into each individual bill impacting women in every single state, rather than having consistent protections and rights guaranteed for all.  As a result, equal pay, violence against women, access to reproductive healthcare, pregnancy rights, and all cases of sex discrimination, are subject to the whims of an executive order, an election cycle, and a judicial opinion, where the decision-makers are overwhelmingly male. 

5.       Only two countries in the entire world, Iran and the United States, have refused to sign the CEDAW (The Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women). We are one of the only industrialized nation in the world without constitutional protections against sex discrimination and when we help other countries' write their constitutions we demand they include equal rights and protections for women-- despite not having it in our own. 

6.       We have seen a major sociocultural shift in attitudes about gender equality in the last four decades. Over 91% of Americans think that women and men should have equal rights confirmed in the constitution (however, more than 72% of Americans mistakenly think that we already do).

For more information about the ERA, please visit these websites: 

 

The Opposition

Opponents distort the ERA

Ann MacLean Massie
Professor of Law, Emerita at Washington & Lee University.

Re: “Women should beware of the ERA” by Victoria Cobb and Marjorie Dannenfelser (Thursday, Jan. 17, 2019)

As a retired Constitutional Law professor, I feel compelled to respond to the blatant inaccuracies in the opinion piece published by The Roanoke Times on Jan. 17 by Victoria Cobb and Marjorie Dannenfelser. Their column, “Women should beware of the ERA” claimed that ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, now coming up again for a possible vote, would be dangerous for women, and, indeed, would undo many of the statutory non-discrimination protections enacted by Congress. 

Such a claim totally misconstrues the nature of the Constitution and its role in our national life. Cobb and Dannenfelser overlook the key fact that, other than the Thirteenth Amendment (which prohibits slavery and applies universally in the U.S.), the Constitution applies only to government conduct. If the ERA were to become part of our Constitution, it would mean that government (federal, state, local) and all government actors (employees of government) would have to accord equal rights to all people, regardless of their gender. That would say nothing at all about the behavior of private entities and actors, such as private employers and private institutions, such as churches.

Included in that column were numerous assertions of specific effects that simply do not hold true. The women spend over half their space on the abortion controversy, concluding that “ERA would [enshrine] in our Constitution a right to abortion on demand, paid for with taxpayer dollars.” Under current law, any adult woman has the right to decide to have an abortion pre-viability. The ERA says absolutely nothing about it. If the current abortion cases were overruled, the controversy would again devolve to the states. Other medical procedures are prohibited by law (such as a right to physician aid-in-dying, protected in a few states but prohibited in most), and presumably, abortion could be, as well, absent its current protections under the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.

Cobb and Dannenfelser further claim that “ERA would open up a host of unintended consequences,” possibly breaching the inviolability of “sex-segregated sports teams and prisons, as well as personal privacy in bathrooms, locker rooms, hospital rooms, nursing homes and other traditionally female-only spaces.” I cannot imagine what leads them to such speculations. 

Constitutional equal protection regardless of sex would not require mixing of persons of different genders in any of those facilities (even those owned or operated by government), any more than coeducation at VMI led to mixed bathrooms there or affected the single-sex policies of Hollins and Sweet Briar.

Similarly incomprehensible is the column’s assertion that “Title IX, which guarantees women equal opportunity in collegiate sports, would be rendered meaningless.” The truth is that the great freedoms protected from government intrusion by the Constitution are fleshed out and applied to private actors, as well as public, by federal statutes prohibiting discrimination based on race, ethnicity, origin, sex, religion, and even age and disability (not mentioned in the Constitution). To say that any of them would be somehow nullified, or even modified, by the ERA makes no sense at all. Finally, Cobb and Dannenfelser raise the specter of judge-imposed sameness of treatment on houses of worship. Nothing could be further from the truth. Freedom of religion is specifically protected by the First Amendment. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 contains a specific protection for religious institutions that limit their leadership to a single sex, exempting those positions from the general requirement of non-discrimination in employment.

People need to hear the accurate story of what the ERA would and would not do before they make up their minds about whether their state legislature should vote to ratify the ERA’s provision that “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.”

LWV Still Fighting

 By Vickie Samuelson, League of Women Voters of Utah co-president

Updated: April 24, 2020

Did you know that our U.S. Constitution has no prohibition for discrimination on the basis of sex? That’s not for lack of trying. When Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the ERA this past January, we came tantalizingly close to finishing this fight.

For the past 100 years, our citizens have been trying to pass an Equal Rights Amendment that would do just that. While steps have been taken to forbid discrimination at federal and state levels, the ERA has been stopped for reasons that are unclear or unfounded. Read more from the Salt Lake Tribune.

ensure equal rights for all

While the League anticipates working closely with the Biden Administration, passing the E.R.A. remains a high priority. Read the League’s letter to the incoming administration outlining opportunities to advance voting rights and democracy.

Join the Alice Paul Institute, the ERA Coalition, and hundreds of pro-ERA organizations across the nation in a campaign to get the Equal Rights Amendment on the President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris administration. Use #ERAFIRST100DAYS and #ERA. Tag @POTUS and @VP to make sure they know you want the ERA to be a priority in their administration.

 

 Why the ERA Failed

 The Debate

Watch the 2021 debate between the Utah Eagle Forum’s Gayle Ruzicka and Sen. Kathleen Riebe, D-8.

https://youtu.be/JlVHiD_8N3M