ERA—Equal Rights for Women—in the US: Has Our Time Finally Come? by Carol P. Christ

On August 26, 1970, I borrowed an old VW bug from my mentor and summer employer Michael Novak to drive from Oyster Bay, Long Island to New York City to take part in the Women’s Strike for Equality march down Fifth Avenue. Some 50,000 women attended the march and another 50,000 took part in sister actions around the United States. The march celebrated the 50th anniversary of the passage of the Women’s Suffrage Amendment that gave women the right to vote. The ERA was on our minds, but it was not the only issue on the feminist agenda. We believed that all the walls created by patriachy would come tumbling down, and soon!

In those days, feminism was an unfamiliar idea and feminists were often objects of ridicule. Esteemed news anchor Eric Sevareid called feminism an “infectious disease” and labeled the marchers (I suppose that includes me!) “a bunch of braless bubbleheads.” Nonetheless the cause of women’s rights had widespread bipartisan support among lawmakers. Following a suggestion by Democratic Congresswoman Bella Abzug, Republican President Richard Nixon declared August 26 “Women’s Equality Day.”

In February 1970, the National Organization for Women sat in at the offices of Congress calling for a hearing on the Equal Rights Amendment. On August 10, Representative Martha Griffiths introduced the ERA in the House, where it was passed but not taken up by the Senate. Reintroduced by Rep. Griffiths, the ERA was overwhelmingly passed by both houses of Congress in 1972, and it was endorsed by Nixon, who asked the states to approve it.

Crystal Eastman
Alice Paul

This was not the beginning of the struggle for equal rights for women in the United States. The ERA was an outgrowth of work for the vote and women’s rights that began in the 1840s. In 1923 suffragists and socialist feminists Alice Paul, founder of the National Women’s Party, and Crystal Eastman, founder of the Women’s Peace Party, delivered the original version of the ERA (which Paul revised in 1943, this wording becoming the text of the current amendment) to Congress.

When the amendment finally passed in 1972, it was widely believed that it would easily become law before the 1979 deadline that was arbitrarily attached to it.

The fact that the ERA has not yet been passed can be attributed to a well-educated married white woman, lawyer Phylis Schafley, who, funded by the insurance industry, unions that feared women would be sent back to sweat shops, and conservative interests in general, launched the STOP ERA (Stop Taking Our Privileges) campaign. The anti-ERA movement was supported by Southern whites, Evangelical Christians, Mormons (Sonia Johnson was excommunicated for supporting the ERA), Orthodox Jews, and Roman Catholics, including the National Council of Catholic Women.

With the deadline approaching, 35 states had ratified the amendment (with 4 rescinding the ratification), while 38 were needed for passage. The deadline was extended until 1982, but no new states passed it during the extension.

In the 1990s, a “three-state strategy” emerged. It proponents argued that when the 38 states ratified the ERA, it would be up to congress to decide whether or not to accept the ratification. They noted that states had passed amendments after the deadlines in the past, but that these ratifications had not been questioned. They also stated that there was no precedent for states to rescind ratification.

In 2009, the National Organization for Women supported the three-state strategy. Nevada ratified the ERA in 2017, followed by Illinois in 2018, leaving only one more stated needed. In November 2019, Virginia Democrats gained control of both houses: Virginia is widely expected to ratify the ERA in 2020.

The Virginia legislature was flipped from Republican to Democrat due in no small part to house-to-house campaigning by the grass-roots organization Indivisible that formed in reaction to the election of Donald Trump. My good friend and longtime feminist co-conspirator Ellen Boneparth was part of this effort. If the ERA passes, we will owe a debt of gratitude to her and others who have been knocking on doors over the past few years.

If Democrats win both houses of Congress in 2020, legislation to remove the ratification deadline will pass. It would then be up to the Supreme Court to decide whether or not to hear the case–that would surely be filed–alleging that Congress had no right to extend the deadline. The court could decline to rule on the case, thus indirectly affirming the ratification of the ERA. Or it could rule.

In 1973, Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote:

The equal rights amendment, in sum, would dedicate the nation to a new view of the rights and responsibilities of men and women. It firmly rejects sharp legislative lines between the sexes as constitutionally tolerable. Instead, it looks toward a legal system in which each person will be judged on the basis of individual merit and not on the basis of an unalterable trait of birth that bears no necessary relationship to need or ability.

May we knock on every door in the United States in 2020 in order to ensure that Donald Trump and his collaborators are thrown out of office in the greatest Blue Wave ever. Maybe then the time will finally come when women’s equality under the law will be affirmed in the United States Constitution! This would not be the end of women’s struggles to be treated as fully human, but it would indeed be a milestone worth celebration after all these years of women’s work.

Find an Indivisible group.

Unattributed facts in this blog can be found in an exceeding scholarly entry “Equal Rights Amendment” in Wikepedia.

 

Carol P. Christ is an internationally known feminist and ecofeminist writer, activist, and educator who will soon be moving to Heraklion, Crete. Carol’s recent book written with Judith Plaskow, Goddess and God in the World: Conversations in Embodied Theology, is on Amazon. A Serpentine Path: Mysteries of the Goddess is on sale for $9.99 on Amazon. Carol has been leading Goddess Pilgrimage to Crete for over twenty years: join her in Crete. Carol’s photo by Michael Honneger.

Listen to Carol’s a-mazing interview with Mary Hynes on CBC’s Tapestry recorded in conjunction with her keynote address to the Parliament of World’s Religions.

Author: Carol P. Christ

Carol P. Christ is a leading feminist historian of religion and theologian who leads the Goddess Pilgrimage to Crete, a life transforming tour for women. www.goddessariadne.org

12 thoughts on “ERA—Equal Rights for Women—in the US: Has Our Time Finally Come? by Carol P. Christ”

    1. Thanks Glenys, I just fixed the link. As for the PWR address, it was a response to President Carter’s address in which he named religion as the biggest obstacle to women’s rights (with which I agree) and then went on to argue that religions’ opposition to women’s rights is based on misinterpretation of selected texts (with which I disagree). I have not yet published the lecture though it is publication-ready. I am looking for a venue in which progressive Christians, Jews, and Muslims might read it. Anyone have any suggestions?

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  1. “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” The simplicity and the clarity of the wording of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment is proof of its power to threaten those who support the status quo. I especially appreciate that this language does reject the attempt by some in the culture to conflate sex with gender.

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  2. Thanks for this history lesson, one that we all need to learn. If even a villain like Richard Nixon endorsed the ERA, why can’t the current occupant of the White House? Oh, well, that’s a really silly question. Trump has no concept of equality or rights. I remember Schafley, and I remember how the standard-brand religions were so fearful of women with any kind of rights. Those were scary years, and much of the country seems to have retreated back into those fears of equality for women. I just can’t figure that out. Can we trust the current Supreme Court to do anything to support women’s equality?

    You’re right: one approach is to become a blue wave in 2020. Here we come!!!

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  3. Dear Braless Bubblehead Carol, I just had to try it out on my tongue (and on my keyboard). I see it as a wonderful badge of honor (sort of like Nixon’s enemy list turned out to be, and I assume eventually will be the same from our present president). I assume Sevaried did not mean it as a compliment but surely we can turn it into one. Bubbles are colorful and they float on the air which allows them to rise above to see the bigger picture. A wonderful thing!

    I know I am thinking about this through 2019 eyes but geez – what would the equivalent of braless be for a man? jockstrapless head in the dirt sort. Actually that would be a compliment too, I wish more men/people would “know” the dirt of the earth.

    Thanks for the important slice of history lesson.

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  4. Carol Thank you so much for this article on the Equal Rights Amendment. It is beautifully written and captures the issues. I am part of the activists working diligently on the 3 State Strategy. In 2014 I went on your pilgrimage and began my work on behalf of getting the ERA ratified. I was on a panel at Univ Richmond Law School 10/26/19 & did a presentation last night for the New Canaan Historical society on the ERA. We have had armies of people working on getting candidates to focus on the ERA for years. A movie and book came out 2016 “Equal Means Equal” We had a bus giving out free ice cream for 2 months in VA before the Nov 5th vote. The website to see our activity is VARatifyERA.org. (To date Indivisible has not been willing to take leadership on the ERA.) We expect VA to ratify early next year and there are substantive arguments that the deadline doesn’t apply. By February 2020 we expect to have the required 38 States and to have moved the US into the democracy envisioned by our Founding Mothers.

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