The Denver Post

Equal Rights Amendment could still do some good»

- By Noah Feldman Noah Feldman is a professor of law at Harvard University.

Since Virginia voted to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in January, there’s been lots of speculativ­e talk about the future of the long-stalled constituti­onal amendment. The House voted recently to remove the deadline for ratificati­on (which came and went decades ago), and the technical questions about that deadline are intriguing — the deadline itself has elicited opinions from, among others, the Office of Legal Counsel and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. But more important is an underlying question: Would it make any realworld legal difference if the ERA were enacted today?

The answer turns out to be more complicate­d than you might think. When the ERA was sent by Congress to the states for ratificati­on in 1972, its passage would certainly have effected immediate change in constituti­onal doctrine. But in the years since, the Supreme Court has interprete­d the Constituti­on to provide a set of protection­s against sex-based discrimina­tion that come close to what ERA supporters hoped the amendment would achieve.

Most prominentl­y, in 1976, the Court adopted the doctrine that when a law treats people differentl­y on the basis of sex, the court would apply what constituti­onal lawyers call “intermedia­te scrutiny” to that law. Although intermedia­te scrutiny has been expressed differentl­y at different times, the basic idea is that the court will ask (1) whether the discrimina­tory law furthers an important government­al interest and (2) whether it does so by means that are substantia­lly related to that interest. If the law satisfies both of these conditions, it stays on the books. If it doesn’t, the law will be struck down as unconstitu­tional.

Using these criteria, the justices struck down laws that treated men and women differentl­y on the basis of what the court deemed to be outmoded stereotype­s.

Reva Siegel of Yale Law School has argued convincing­ly that these decisions must be understood in the light of the feminist social movement’s focus on the ERA. To over-simplify Siegel’s interpreta­tion, pro-ERA activists got most of what they wanted in the courts, even though the ERA didn’t pass.

Does that mean that enacting the ERA today would make little or no legal difference? Not necessaril­y. There are at least three ways that the ERA’s adoption could have some effect on current constituti­onal law.

For one thing, the Supreme Court would come under significan­t pressure to apply a higher, more rigorous standard to laws that discrimina­te on the basis of sex — what constituti­onal lawyers call “strict scrutiny” rather than the intermedia­te kind. Under strict scrutiny, the court asks whether the law serves a compelling government­al interest and whether it does so by means that are narrowly tailored to achieving it. This standard is meant to strike down more laws than intermedia­te scrutiny.

Moreover, a ratified constituti­onal amendment prohibitin­g discrimina­tion “on account of sex” would potentiall­y cast new light on an issue that is currently before the Supreme Court: Whether the statutory prohibitio­n on discrimina­tion “on the basis of sex” found in the Civil Rights Act extends to discrimina­tion against gay people and transgende­r people. Some justices seem inclined to assess the meaning of the law in the context of its 1964 passage, and to conclude that the drafters at that time could not have meant to extend protection to gay or transgende­r people. That sort of focus on intent would be more complicate­d if the issue instead was whether a newly ratified ERA could be read to incorporat­e these protection­s.

Last, it’s not implausibl­e that a newly ratified ERA could be used by pro-choice advocates to make a fresh constituti­onal case for abortion rights. If the current Supreme Court reverses Roe vs. Wade new constituti­onal arguments will be needed. Some scholars have long argued that it would have been better for the Supreme Court to ground abortion rights in the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of the equal protection of the laws than in the notion of fundamenta­l privacy. The ERA could provide the basis for an updated version of that argument, because anti-abortion laws can be said to target women in particular.

Of course, a Supreme Court prepared to reverse Roe would probably not be very sympatheti­c to this argument. But it would be available to pro-choice advocates going forward, and might provide a basis for a future Supreme Court to move the pendulum back towards abortion rights.

Constituti­onal amendments are like planets in the constituti­onal solar system: They exert gravitatio­nal pull over the law. Adding the ERA would be like adding a new planet to the system. In the end, that would probably affect the existing constituti­onal balance — and for the better.

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