Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumIt’s Been 90 Years: Time to Pass the ERA! (actually, 91 years)
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Equal Rights Amendment
Paul was the original author of a proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution in 1923.[7] The ERA was passed by both houses in Congress in 1972 and was then submitted to the state legislatures for ratification. Approval by 38 states was required to ensure adoption of the amendment. Not enough statesonly 35voted in favor in time for the deadline. However, efforts to pass the ERA are still happening, as well as efforts to pass a new equality amendment. Although the amendment hasn't passed yet, almost half of the U.S. states have adopted the ERA into their state constitutions.[13]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Paul
Its Been 90 Years: Time to Pass the ERA!
Reps. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) and Jackie Speier (D-CA) gathered on the steps of the Supreme Court Thursday morning to demand that the Equal Rights Amendment finally pass.
The congresswomen, along with Feminist Majority president (and publisher of Ms.) Ellie Smeal, NOW president Terry ONeill and other feminist leaders and activists, called on legislators to codify womens equality in the constitution. As a reminder of the anti-woman rhetoric that has lately informed public policy, Rep. Speier quoted Supreme Court Justice Anthony Scalia, Certainly the constitution does not require discrimination on the basis of sex, the only issue is whether it prohibits it. It doesnt.
She continued,
A justice of the Supreme Court has said publicly that the constitution does not prohibit discrimination based on sex, and that is precisely why we need the ERA. Those words should haunt every woman in this country.
The good news, she said, is that equality is only 24 words away, referencing the text of the ERA:
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 congresswomen have each introduced ERA-related legislation. In March, Rep. Speier called on legislators to remove the deadline by which states must ratify the amendment (the last deadline was June 1982, and by that date the ERA was just three states shy of passing). If passed, her bill would give those last three states a chance to ratify the amendment.
In September 2013, Rep. Maloney re-introduced the ERA in Congress (it was first introduced by Alice Paul in 1923), asking legislators to pass the bill and send it to the states for ratification. Most feminists are supporting both strategies, because they ultimately lead to the same goal.
As Rep. Speier said Thursday, The ERA is critically necessary because it would once and for all give women the remedies for justice when they face sex discrimination.
Ninety years is long enoughits time to pass the ERA. To get involved, tweet your support with the hashtag #ERANow.
http://msmagazine.com/blog/2014/07/24/its-been-90-years-time-to-pass-the-era/
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)Remember this company name: GEICO
After Hobby Lobby, Democratic Legislators Push Anew for Equal Rights Amendment
by Emily Crockett, Federal Policy Reporter, RH Reality Check
July 24, 2014
Leah Meredith had worked hard at Geico for four years and gotten several promotions, and she was up for another promotion when she got pregnant. It was a difficult pregnancy, she said, and although by the third trimester she could barely walk, she still kept up her work. But when she was called into a meeting right before she took maternity leave, she was advised that she would not be receiving her promotion. She filed a pregnancy discrimination complaint with human resources, and they said they would investigate.
After she came back from the four months of leave she needed to heal and bond with her daughter, Meredith said, [the] response was that there was no response. They werent sure what my position would be. I had no desk, and my items were packed in broken boxes.
Pregnancy discrimination on the job is common to this day, despite laws intended to prevent it, and thats just one of many reasons to ratify an Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the U.S. Constitution, said Democratic legislators and womens rights advocates at a Thursday morning rally in front of the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court has made clear that women are not necessarily considered equal in the Constitution, said Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA) at the rally. Speier has introduced a resolution in the House that would make it easier to ratify the ERA....
MORE at http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2014/07/24/hobby-lobby-democratic-legislators-push-anew-equal-rights-amendment/
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)Winston-Salem Journal (NC)
25 July, 2014
Former state Rep. Margaret Tennille has died
In February 1979, state Rep. Margaret Tennille, a Forsyth County Democrat, watched from the sidelines as the Senate Constitutional Amendments Committee in the N.C. General Assembly killed the Equal Rights Amendment...
...At the time, Senate leaders decided to kill the bill in committee because they feared a floor fight over the ERA was too politically risky, the Winston-Salem Journal reported. Democratic Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green and his allies in the N.C. Senate opposed the measure.
Tennille strongly supported the ERA, said her son, Ben Tennille, a retired state business-court judge.
She fought hard for that, and she never forgave Jimmy Green for not getting it passed, Ben Tennille said Thursday.
Margaret Tennille, 97, died of natural causes Monday at her home, her son said. She served five terms in the N.C. House from 1973 to 1984....
MORE at http://www.journalnow.com/news/local/former-state-rep-margaret-tennille-has-died/article_3f745d72-0190-540f-b936-e9ba15ebe601.html