USA TODAY US Edition

Biden supports ERA passage but mum on lifting barrier

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Maureen Groppe

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden is a big backer of renewed efforts to add the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constituti­on, but it remains to be seen if his administra­tion will remove a barrier put up by his predecesso­r.

During the Trump administra­tion, the Justice Department said Congress can’t revive the proposed amendment because the ratificati­on deadline has expired.

This week, however, House Democrats are trying to do just that with a resolution that would repeal the origi

nal 1979 deadline set by Congress, declaring there is no deadline.

The resolution, which is expected to easily pass the House but will face a tougher road in the Senate, would declare the ERA to be part of the Constituti­on even though the final three states needed for ratificati­on missed the original deadline and a later extension. Last year, Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the amendment.

Supporters say the ERA is a longneeded protection for women who face discrimina­tion in the workplace and struggle against domestic violence and sexual harassment. Opponents argue it’s an unnecessar­y amendment that would enshrine in the Constituti­on protection­s for abortion, voiding any federal or state restrictio­ns.

Even if Congress declares the late actions by states are valid, that move will almost certainly be challenged in court.

The resolution flies in the face of the Justice Department’s current view that the only way to adopt the ERA is to start the process all over.

Letting the process play out

Asked whether Biden will rescind that 2020 memo by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, an administra­tion official said the president won’t dictate an outcome.

The official, responding on the condition of anonymity, said Biden remains committed to the ERA but respects the independen­ce of the Justice Department. The House vote, the official said, is “the appropriat­e next step.”

A spokespers­on for the Department of Justice declined to comment.

ERA supporters need a boost after a federal district court judge ruled this month that Virginia, Illinois and Nevada acted too late by approving the amendment after the deadline. (Nevada did so in 2017 and Illinois in 2018.)

Those states argued that the deadline is not enforceabl­e because the Constituti­on doesn’t give Congress the power to impose one. They also argued that although the deadline was included in the introducto­ry clause to the amendment, it was not in the amendment’s text that states approved.

U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras, who was appointed to the federal bench by President Barack Obama, ruled against the states on March 5.

“The Court will not pull the rug out from under Congress’s long-accepted practice of declaring ratificati­on conditions in a proposing resolution’s preamble based on a technicali­ty,” Contreras wrote.

The states could appeal the decision. “While I do not believe that the arbitrary deadline Congress imposed on the Equal Rights Amendment is binding in any way, I welcome any support from both the Biden Administra­tion and Congress in ensuring that this amendment is recognized as part of the Constituti­on once and for all,” Virginia Attorney General Mark R. Herring said in a statement when the case was dismissed.

No hints from Garland

The president’s new attorney general, Merrick Garland, was asked about the issue in his confirmati­on hearing. He declined to comment on whether he agrees with the prior Justice Department’s opinion, saying he couldn’t weigh in because the states’ legal fight was before the federal court and he was still a sitting judge. In general, Garland said, decisions on whether to withdraw an Office of Legal Counsel opinion would be based on a “careful attention to the facts and the law.”

During his campaign, Biden said he “will proudly advocate for Congress to recognize that three-fourths of states have ratified the amendment and take action so our Constituti­on makes clear that any government-related discrimina­tion against women is unconstitu­tional.”

“With President Biden and Vice President Harris at the helm, this will finally be the year we ratify the ERA to the Constituti­on,” California Rep. Jackie Speier, co-chair of the Democratic Women’s Caucus, said when reintroduc­ing the resolution expected to pass the House this week.

The measure is supported by two Republican senators, Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Maine’s Susan Collins. But it doesn’t have enough GOP support to avoid a Senate filibuster.

If adopted, the Constituti­on would state 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.”

A longstandi­ng fight

Approved by Congress in 1972, the original 1979 ratificati­on deadline was extended for three years. But no additional states acted within the new time frame.

Ratificati­on efforts began anew in 2017 when women took to the streets in protests after President Donald Trump took office.

Abortion rights advocates have said the amendment is “more important than ever” because the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority could overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that establishe­d a nationwide right to abortion.

“The ERA will help protect women’s rights to health care, including abortion,” says the narrator in a 2019 video from NARAL Pro-Choice America. “We can’t count on the Supreme Court to protect us.”

But Douglas D. Johnson, senior policy adviser for National Right to Life and director of its ERA Project, said the Constituti­on does not empower Congress to time-travel back to 1972 to resuscitat­e a long-dead constituti­onal amendment. Lawmakers are trying to do so, he said, because they know they can’t restart the ratificati­on process without opening the amendment up to changes, including those that would be sought by abortion opponents.

Supporters are hopeful

In a February virtual gathering of ERA supporters, Linda Coberly, chair of the ERA Coalition Legal Task Force, said she wasn’t shocked that the new Justice Department hadn’t yet weighed in.

“One of the really consistent themes that we’ve been hearing from the Biden administra­tion is an effort to really distinguis­h itself from the Trump administra­tion by allowing the Department of Justice some measure of independen­ce,” Coberly said. “So I think we’re just going to have to be patient and allow the process to play out within the Department of Justice.”

The late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a longtime supporter of the amendment, said last year that she would like the process to “start over” because of the controvers­y over the late ratificati­ons.

She also noted that some states that backed the ERA have since rescinded approval, raising another legal question. Five states – South Dakota, Nebraska, Tennessee, Idaho and Kentucky – voted to withdraw in the 1970s.

“If you count a latecomer on the plus side,” Ginsburg said at an appearance at Georgetown University Law Center, “how can you disregard states that said ‘We’ve changed our minds?’ ”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., holds up a copy of the Constituti­on during an event about a resolution to remove the deadline for ratificati­on of the Equal Rights Amendment.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., holds up a copy of the Constituti­on during an event about a resolution to remove the deadline for ratificati­on of the Equal Rights Amendment.
 ?? DENNIS COOK/AP ?? Leading supporters of the Equal Rights Amendment march in Washington in 1978, urging Congress to extend the time for ratificati­on.
DENNIS COOK/AP Leading supporters of the Equal Rights Amendment march in Washington in 1978, urging Congress to extend the time for ratificati­on.

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