USA TODAY US Edition

House votes to revive Equal Rights Amendment

Justice Dept. has said move was not possible

- Maureen Groppe

WASHINGTON – The House voted largely along party lines Wednesday to remove the expired deadline for ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment for women, despite the Justice Department’s view that such a move is not possible.

The resolution, which must also be approved by the Senate, says the amendment shall be part of the Constituti­on whenever it’s been ratified by the legislatur­es of three-fourths of the states. That happened last year.

But the 222 to 204 House vote came decades after the seven-year ratificati­on deadline set by Congress as well as a three-year extension approved when the amendment was coming close to passage in the 1970s.

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

President Joe Biden has made equity a priority of his administra­tion. Vice President Kamala Harris is the first woman to win a national election.

“I supported the ERA from the very beginning,” Biden said at the first Democratic debate in 2019.

But Biden has not removed a barrier to passage put up by his predecesso­r.

During the Trump administra­tion, the Justice Department said Congress can’t revive the proposed amendment; it can only restart the ratificati­on process.

“We conclude that Congress had the constituti­onal authority to impose a deadline on the ratificati­on of the ERA and, because that deadline has expired, the ERA Resolution is no longer pending before the States,” the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel wrote.

Asked if Biden will rescind that opinion, an administra­tion official said Biden won’t dictate an outcome. The Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment. The White House did not issue a “statement of administra­tion policy” on the ERA resolution as it did on another bill debated Wednesday that would revive a law aimed at reducing domestic and sexual violence.

Speier told USA TODAY on Wednesday she is confident the Justice Department’s 2020 opinion will be withdrawn.

“If you talk to any constituti­onal scholar, they said the opinion that was offered by the Justice Department last year was laughable, that it could not hold water in any real serious court of law,” she said. “That was a political statement.”

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

“I wish that I could tell you that we had more Republican support for that at this point in time,” Murkowski said Tuesday. “We continue to work that.”

The Senate did not take it up after the House passed the resolution last year.

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.”

Supporters say it’s a long-needed protection for women who face discrimina­tion in the workplace and struggle against domestic violence and sexual harassment.

Though many federal, state and local laws prohibit discrimina­tion, those can be changed much more easily than a constituti­onal amendment. Courts treat sex discrimina­tion cases inconsiste­ntly, advocates say.

Opponents argue it’s an unnecessar­y amendment that would enshrine in the Constituti­on protection­s for abortion, voiding any federal or state restrictio­ns. Anti-abortion groups have pointed to court decisions in Connecticu­t and New Mexico that used state-approved equal rights amendments to allow “medically necessary” abortions for women on public assistance.

“Men and women are already equal under the Constituti­on. This legislatio­n would make us no more equal,” Rep. Michelle Fischbach, R-Minn., said during floor debate. “It is merely a vehicle for the far-left, special interest groups to use to enact their pro-abortion agenda.”

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 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.

Congress approved the ERA in 1972, including in it what the Congressio­nal Research Service calls a “customary, but not constituti­onally mandatory,” seven-year deadline for ratificati­on by three-fourths of the states. When the number of states fell three short of the required 38 by 1977, Congress extended the deadline to 1982. No additional states acted by the new deadline.

Ratificati­on efforts began anew in 2017 when women took to the streets in protests following President Donald Trump’s election.

Nevada became the 36th state to ratify the amendment that year, followed by Illinois in 2018.

Virginia approved it last year, the first time that a proposed constituti­onal amendment was adopted by the required number of states after a deadline under the premise that it could still be ratified.

Those states unsuccessf­ully argued in court that the deadline is not enforceabl­e because the Constituti­on doesn’t give Congress the power to impose one. They also argued that while 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.

“With President Biden and Vice President Harris at the helm, this will finally be the year we ratify the ERA to the Constituti­on.”

Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? If the ERA is 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.”
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES If the ERA is 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.”

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