Not everyone agrees that the ERA is now official. The New York Times explained why:
President Biden declared on Friday that he believes that the Equal Rights Amendmenthas met the requirements of ratification and therefore is now part of the Constitution, but he declined to order the government to finalize the process by officially publishing it.
“In keeping with my oath and duty to Constitution and country, I affirm what I believe and what three-fourths of the states have ratified: The 28th Amendment is the law of the land, guaranteeing all Americans equal rights and protections under the law regardless of their sex,” Mr. Biden said in a statement.
Under the Constitution, however, the president has no direct role in approving amendments and his statement has no legal force by itself. The archivist of the United States, a Biden appointee, has refused to formally publish the amendment on the grounds that it has not met the requirements to become part of the Constitution.
Thomas Jipping, a senior legal fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said that Mr. Biden’s announcement amounted to nothing more than his personal beliefs. He noted that Mr. Biden’s Justice Department had defended the archivist in a legal opinion, arguing that no “relevant legal authority” had been identified establishing that the amendment had been adopted past the congressional deadline.
“If he wants to personally believe that, that’s fine, but it has no legal effect whatsoever, and all of the evidence says that he’s wrong,” Mr. Jipping said. “It’s like talking into the air — it has absolutely no effect beyond symbolism.”
Aides said that Mr. Biden was not ordering the archivist, Colleen Shogan, to reverse her position and publish the amendment, as advocates have urged him to do. Asked for comment on Friday, the archivist’s office referred back to previous statements refusing to publish the amendment, indicating that Dr. Shogan would not change her stance.
Even so, advocates maintained that Mr. Biden’s imprimatur gave the amendment additional credibility for any future court battle over whether it actually had the force of law. In effect, Mr. Biden and his allies are daring opponents to go to court to argue that women do not have equal rights.
The amendment would guarantee equality for women in all facets of life, such as pay, and provide a constitutional guarantee against sex discrimination. Congressional Democrats resurrected efforts to add the amendment as a safeguard for women’s rights after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Democrat of New York, who led the charge for Mr. Biden to unilaterally establish the amendment, said that the president’s declaration superseded the archivist, and that she was “no longer relevant.”
Ms. Gillibrand said Mr. Biden’s declaration obligated states to enforce the amendment and gave people a right to take legal action.
“I’m calling on plaintiffs to please file their lawsuits,” Ms. Gillibrand said in an interview. “I think it’s very important. Win or lose in the Supreme Court, it is essential this moment in time is recorded. This was the archivist’s job. She refused to do it. President Biden has recorded this moment in time.”
Mr. Biden’s decision to weigh in just three days before he leaves office on an issue that has divided the country for generations amounted to a late effort to bring about profound change and shape his own legacy, but without taking actual action.
The Equal Rights Amendment was first proposed more than a century ago and has taken a circuitous route to ratification. It easily passed both houses of Congress with the required two-thirds votes in 1972 and over the next few years was ratified by most states. But it fell short of the three-quarters of states required under the Constitution until January 2020, when Virginia became the 38th state to ratify it.
Opponents have argued that a seven-year deadline imposed by Congress (and later extended by another three years) meant the ratification was not completed in time, while proponents maintain the deadline was invalid. Moreover, several states that originally ratified the amendment have tried to rescind their approval, adding another point of legal uncertainty to the situation.
Mr. Biden said in his statement on Friday that he agreed with legal groups such as the American Bar Association and constitutional scholars who have since determined that the amendment had “cleared all necessary hurdles to be formally added to the Constitution as the 28th Amendment.” During an address to the nation’s mayors on Friday, the president said he had “consulted dozens of constitutional scholars to make sure it was all within the power to do this.”
“It is long past time to recognize the will of the American people,” Mr. Biden said.
The amendment itself, originally written by the women’s rights activist Alice Paul in 1923 and later modified, essentially is a single sentence: “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 rest of the amendment simply says that Congress can pass legislation to enforce it and that it would go into effect two years after ratification.
While the text of the amendment seems relatively straightforward on its face at a time when federal law already prohibits sex discrimination, it in fact has long been an explosive issue. Advocates argue that such a bedrock principle should be explicitly built into the Constitution, not just statutory law, while critics contend it would have far-reaching consequences on everything from abortion rights to a military draft for women.
Democrats have been pressing Mr. Biden to order the archivist to publish the amendment. Last month, Dr. Shogan and her deputy, William J. Bosanko, issued a statement saying the Equal Rights Amendment “cannot be certified as part of the Constitution due to established legal, judicial and procedural decisions.”
Dr. Shogan and Mr. Bosanko cited various court decisions and memos from the Justice Department in concluding that they “cannot legally publish the Equal Rights Amendment.”
But former Senator Russ Feingold, Democrat of Wisconsin and the president of the American Constitution Society, a progressive advocacy group, who has been among those pushing for the archivist to publish the amendment, said Mr. Biden’s statement was meaningful even if she does not.
“It’s completely historic to have the president of the United States say it’s already in the Constitution,” Mr. Feingold said in an interview. “I believe and many believe that whether or not the archivist certifies it or not doesn’t matter.”
That represents a turnabout more than two years after saying it did matter and advancing the strategy of pressing the archivist to publish it as a way to finally declare the amendment part of the Constitution. Now, Mr. Feingold said, the archivist’s role is “merely ministerial” and the president’s opinion is more meaningful.
“For the president to recognize it as a matter of law is something we’ve been working on for years,” he said. “It is a significant moment after 100 years.”
Back when I was a conservative, I opposed the ERA because I believed that women–as Americans–had equal rights. Now, I admit that I’m happy to see, or hope, that it was ratified. The ERA became a symbolic statement about whether one thought that women should have equal rights. Of course, we should!
And it will be interesting to see the court cases. Who will argue that women do not have equal rights?
Do we have equal rights? The U.S. Supreme Court stripped away a right we had had for 50 years. Dobbs. Shameful.

When the hissy fit hits the fan …
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There could not be a better time for the re-opening of the case for the ERA to emerge. DO we have equal rights? No. And the current flurry of state legislation over abortion, not to mention Pete Hegseth’s thinly veiled contempt for women in the military makes establishing it in the constitution critical at this point.
I’ve been following this issue closely since I saw doc film “Ratified.” It’s time; having such an amendment makes countless legal cases protecting the rights of women rest on a stronger foundation of law.
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It’s 2025 and we still haven’t sorted this out! How could there be any argument against such an amendment? Oh, of course, we must consider the tender feelings of the Neanderthals, reactionaries, misogynists and crypto-fascists.
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The ERA is, constitutionally, now part of our Constitution. Here’s why:
Article V of our Constitution says: “Amendments…shall be valid to all Intents and Purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified by three fourth of the several States, or by Convention in three fourths thereof.”
There is no language in Article V that gives Congress the constitutional authority to set a deadline in time as to when either of those two methods of ratification has to be made.
THE DEADLINE THAT CONGRESS SET ON THE ERA IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
And, since all the constitutional requirements for ratification of the ERA have been fulfilled, the ERA is “for all Intents and Purposes” part of our Constitution.
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If Biden’s proclamation is what makes ERA officially part of the constitution, one might ask why he didn’t make this proclamation when it would have mattered, prior to the Dobbs decision.
Of course Biden’s statement is only symbolic; he has no power to enact constitutional law. But by the same token, if Virginia’s ratification in 2020 is all that was required to make the ERA effective, one might ask why Biden’s DOJ never made that argument in the Dobbs case.
It’s almost as if Biden never really believed the ERA became effective upon Virginia’s ratification.
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What quikwrit said:
‘Article V of our Constitution says: “Amendments…shall be valid to all Intents and Purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified by three fourth of the several States, or by Convention in three fourths thereof.”
There is no language in Article V that gives Congress the constitutional authority to set a deadline in time as to when either of those two methods of ratification has to be made.
THE DEADLINE THAT CONGRESS SET ON THE ERA IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
And, since all the constitutional requirements for ratification of the ERA have been fulfilled, the ERA is “for all Intents and Purposes” part of our Constitution.’
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This is kind of a super dumbed-down version of a constitutional textualism debate. As in, yes, there’s no language saying Congress can do that. But there’s no language that forbids Congress from setting procedural requirements for the amendment process, either.
There are good arguments why Congress has that authority. There are arguments why it doesn’t. Just because there isn’t language authorizing Congressional action doesn’t end the discussion.
And again, my point here is that Biden himself does not actually believe Virginia’s ratification made the ERA part of the constitution starting in 2020. If he did, he and his DOJ would have mentioned it before a tweet in the last moments of his presidency. This is just not a serious thing.
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For a Supreme Court that doesn’t appear to care what anyone thinks other than what they think old white men said in the Constitution way back when.
It’s kind of like me as the family constitution arbiter. If I said “maybe” to some child’s plea, I left myself open to further litigation, so on more than one occasion, I just said “No!” I could “amend ” my decision later if I so chose.
Since the signatories to the Constitution had no intention of granting women any rights beyond those bestowed on her by her lord and master, ERA was essential. We have let protocols not set in law to direct actions to our detriment. This is not a tea party, and my pinky is not is the air. I suppose this will require several more years of litigation in which men get to dictate what women can do. Does this allow Hegseth to purge the military of women? I know there are creative backdoor ways of doing it.
Of course, I am just venting with absolutely no authority worth paying attention to. May Phyllis Schlafly linger in purgatory for a l-o-o-ong time. If she wasn’t Catholic, I’m sure their is a place for her.
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If you’re truly interested in the issues and arguments here, you could take a look at the 2020 OLC opinion.
https://www.justice.gov/olc/file/1235176/dl?inline
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I can understand a reason for establishing a time limit. Otherwise old amendments could be resurrected 100 years after they were proposed. I’m sure their are some folks who would have a field day with that proposition. and yet, I still don’t see where Congress gets to claim “Constitutional” authority.
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For what it’s worth, this appears to be the relevant precedent:
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/256/368/
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I imagine many of us would feel much better about the demise of this amendment if that death didn’t say something about the continuing mysogynistic thinking of this country. The subtle and not so subtle abuse of women will be openly accepted without the force of law. All “minorities” face abuse at the hands of those in power even with the law behind them. It’s hard to not buy into the inferiority narrative when so many fight against your full recognition.
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It is interesting. The substance of the ERA is as unobjectionable as it is essential for civilized society, such that no one outside a small fringe would ever dispute in public the principle it expresses. But the pro-lifers understand it would damage their cause so they must oppose it.
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That’s too easy an answer. Add barefoot, pregnant and in the kitchen and you get closer to the reasoning metaphorically speaking.
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I wrote a response that disappeared in cyberspace about wishing that pro-lifers were the only reason the amendment died. Add to that, metaphorically speaking, barefoot, pregnant, and in the kitchen. I think that comes closer to the wishes of those who oppose equal rights for women. There are other versions that seek to hobble other minority groups who have, technically, already been granted equal rights. For example, the dismantling of public education will set back millions of people who will be unable to access quality education. Ignorance is not bliss.
In reading back through comments, I discovered I have on more than one occasion substituted “their” for “there.” I even have caught myself using “lose” for “loose” on a couple of occasions. Is there something in the blogosphere that infects some of us with mistakes common usually confined to elementary school?
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I average at least one stupid typo per comment.
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