Orlando Sentinel

Despite backing in Va., ERA’s future uncertain

Lawmakers say it will pass, but there will be pushback

- By Sarah Rankin and David Crary

RICHMOND, Va. — Supporters of the Equal Rights Amendment are so confident Virginia is on the verge of becoming the critical 38th state to ratify the gender equality measure, they are already making plans for how they will celebrate.

But that jubilation could be largely symbolic. Despite broad support for the amendment in the state, the ERA’s prospects nationally are substantia­lly more complicate­d.

The proposed 28th amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on faces a host of likely legal challenges and vehement opposition from conservati­ve activists who depict the ERA as a threat to their stances on abortion and transgende­r rights.

Time is also a factor. When the measure passed Congress in 1972, lawmakers attached a 1977 ratificati­on deadline to it, then extended it to 1982. While the Democrat-controlled House of Representa­tives is likely to extend the deadline again, the Republican­controlled Senate may balk, increasing the chances of litigation.

In Virginia, the ERA’s future is bright: Democrats who seized control of the state legislatur­e in November say there is unanimous support in both their House and Senate caucuses.

“It will pass,” Virginia House Speaker-elect Eileen Filler-Corn said pointedly at a recent news conference attended by cheering advocates, some of whom have been working on the issue for decades.

Virginia supporters have framed ERA ratificati­on as a chance to rebut the state’s long history of racist and intolerant policies.

In the past, Virginia “fought against desegregat­ion, fought against interracia­l marriage, fought against women’s right to vote,” said Jennifer Carroll Foy, chief patron of the House ratificati­on resolution who is also a member of the black caucus and one of the first women admitted to the historical­ly all-male Virginia Military Institute. “And it is only poetic justice that now we stand on the right side of history and finally give women their full constituti­onal equality.”

After a ratificati­on vote, Virginia is expected to submit copies of the state’s resolution to the U.S. archivist. State Attorney General Mark Herring said when that happens, he will include legal arguments in support of the ERA.

Herring, who personally supports the proposed amendment, said his office has been preparing for a long time for potential challenges to Virginia’s ratificati­on.

“If we have to go to court, I won’t hesitate,” he said.

Some of the liveliest debate over the coming months will likely deal with two hot-button social issues that have evolved significan­tly since the ’70s: abortion access and the rights of transgende­r people.

While abortion has been legal nationwide since the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade ruling in 1973, many Republican-controlled states have passed tough anti-abortion laws in recent years and are hopeful the high court might repeal or weaken Roe.

Anti-abortion activists worry that the ERA, if ratified, would be used by abortion-rights supporters to quash abortion restrictio­ns on grounds they specifical­ly discrimina­te against women.

“That’s the whole reason ERA has been brought back,” said Anne Schlafly Cori of the conservati­ve advocacy group Eagle Forum. “The proponents are concerned about Roe being stripped away by the Supreme Court, so they’re trying to shoehorn the ERA into the Constituti­on.”

Martin affirmed that abortion access is a key issue for many ERA supporters; she said adding the amendment to the constituti­on would enable courts to rule that restrictio­ns on abortion “perpetuate gender inequality.”

The issue of transgende­r rights was far from the spotlight in the 1970s, but is likely to be a divisive topic in the coming ERA debate. Some ERA opponents are trying to kindle alarm over the possibilit­y that the amendment would be used to ensure nationwide protection­s for transgende­r women seeking to use women-only restrooms and locker rooms.

Jennifer Boylan, a transgende­r writer who teaches at Barnard College in New York City, depicted such rhetoric as “the hysteria of right-wing scaremonge­rs.”

“The ERA won’t take away anyone’s rights; it will simply make the country a little fairer,” she said.

Among the Virginia lawmakers who will soon vote on the ERA is Danica Roem, the first openly transgende­r person to be elected and seated in a state legislatur­e.

“Equality for women is about equality for all women,” she said. “LGBTQ women are women. And we’re not going away.”

 ?? BOB BROWN/RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH ?? Jennifer Carroll Foy, of the Virginia House of Delegates, is trying to change the state’s voting history on women’s issues.
BOB BROWN/RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH Jennifer Carroll Foy, of the Virginia House of Delegates, is trying to change the state’s voting history on women’s issues.

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