San Diego Union-Tribune

JUDGE DISMISSES LAWSUIT TO RECOGNIZE ERA

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A federal judge on Friday dismissed a lawsuit filed by three Democratic state attorneys general that had sought to force the federal government to recognize Virginia’s vote last year to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment and add it to the Constituti­on.

Shortly after Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the amendment that supporters say will guarantee women equal rights under the law, the archivist of the United States declared he would take no action to certify the amendment’s adoption, citing an opinion from the Justice Department under the Trump administra­tion.

Constituti­onal amendments must be ratified by three-quarters of the states, or 38, but Congress enacted a ratificati­on deadline for the ERA that passed decades ago.

In a ruling Friday evening, U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras said that Nevada, Illinois and Virginia’s motives were “laudable” but that they came too late because Congress set deadlines for ratifying the ERA long ago. Contreras also said the archivist’s publicatio­n and certificat­ion of an amendment are “formalitie­s with no legal effect” so the archivist’s failure to do that doesn’t cause harm and there’s no standing for the states to sue.

In their lawsuit, Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring, Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford and Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul argued that the deadline, which was first set for 1979 and later extended to 1982, was not binding.

Herring said in a statement after the judge’s ruling that he is not giving up the fight and is considerin­g an appeal.

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