Cheryl Towers and Nancy Weinstein: Time to add ERA to Constitution | TribLIVE.com
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Cheryl Towers and Nancy Weinstein: Time to add ERA to Constitution

Cheryl R. Towers And Nancy Weinstein
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AP
Demonstrators protest in Washington, asking Congress to pass the Equal Rights Amendment, Sept. 28.

History is watching and equality is on the line in the United States. Women and men all over the country are working hard to request that President Joe Biden contact the National Archives for publication of the Equal Rights Amendment in the Constitution, but this movement has received little coverage from the mainstream media, and time is of the essence.

Following is a bit of history and update from various sources:

“The ERA was introduced to Congress in 1923, three years after women in the United States were granted the right to vote (by the Nineteenth Amendment), and it was finally approved by the U.S. Senate 49 years later, in March 1972. It was then submitted to the state legislatures for ratification within seven years but, despite a deadline extension to June 1982, was not ratified by the requisite majority of 38 states until 2020. Following its ratification by the 38th state (Virginia), supporters of the ERA argued that if Congress were to adopt legislation rescinding the 1982 deadline, the ERA would become the 28th Amendment to the Constitution.

“Although the ERA gained ratification of 30 states within one year of its Senate approval, mounting intense opposition from conservative religious and political organizations effectively brought ratification to a standstill. The main objections to the ERA were based on fears that women would lose privileges and protections such as exemption from compulsory military service and combat duty and economic support from husbands for themselves and their children.

“Advocates of the ERA … maintained, however, that the issue was mainly economic. (The National Orgnization for Women’s) position was that many sex-discriminatory state and federal laws perpetuated a state of economic dependence among a large number of women and that laws determining child support and job opportunities should be designed for the individual rather than for one sex. Many advocates of the ERA believed that the failure to adopt the measure as an amendment would cause women to lose many gains and would give a negative mandate to courts and legislators regarding feminist issues.”

We have seen this discrimination play out and continue over the years. Sadly, only 14 countries in the world guarantee this equality, and the U.S. is not among them.

Cheryl R. Towers and Nancy Weinstein are co-presidents of the Fox Chapel Branch of the American Association of University Women.

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