What appears below is a letter sent to members
of the U.S. House of Representatives by the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC), on July 7, 2009, regarding Congresswoman Carolyn
Maloney's plans to re-introduce the "Equal Rights Amendment" (ERA)
(also known as the "Women's Equality Amendment").
Re: the "Equal Rights Amendment"
(or "Women's Equality Amendment") and abortion
Dear Member of Congress:
On July 6, 2009, Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney circulated a "Dear
Colleague" letter in which she invited cosponsorship of the "Equal
Rights Amendment" (ERA), sometimes referred to as the "Women's
Equality Amendment," which she apparently intends to re-introduce
soon. For the reasons explained below, the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC) urges you not to cosponsor or otherwise support
this proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution, unless it is
amended in the fashion described below.
Rep. Maloney's resolution would add to the Constitution the
following amendment: "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 Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate
legislation, the provisions of this article. This Amendment shall
take effect two years after the date of ratification."
Congress proposed the same language to the states in 1972, with a
seven-year ratification deadline. The deadline passed without
ratification by the required number of states. Congresswoman Maloney
apparently does not intend to attach any deadline for ratification
to her new resolution.
THE ERA-ABORTION CONNECTION
Leading pro-abortion groups – including NARAL, the ACLU, and Planned
Parenthood -- have strongly urged state courts to construe state
ERAs to require tax-funded abortion on demand, and state ERAs have
been so construed in New Mexico and Connecticut.
The proposed federal constitutional amendment is very similar to the
language of the ERA which New Mexico added to its state constitution
in 1973, which says, "Equality of rights under law shall not be
denied on account of the sex of any person." On November 25, 1998,
the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled 5-0 that such language prohibits
the state from restricting abortion differently from "medically
necessary procedures" sought by men, and the court ordered the state
to pay for elective abortions under the state's Medicaid program.
(NM Right to Choose / NARAL v. Johnson, No. 1999-NMSC-005) (You can
read the ruling and related documents on the ERA page of the NRLC
website at
http://www.nrlc.org/Federal/ERA/Index.html)
In its ruling, the court adopted the construction of the ERA urged
in the case by Planned Parenthood, the National Abortion and
Reproductive Rights Action League, the ACLU, the Center for
Reproductive Law and Policy, and the NOW Legal Defense and Education
Fund. The doctrine that the ERA language invalidates limitations on
tax-funded abortion was also supported in briefs filed by the state
Women's Bar Association, Public Health Association, and League of
Women Voters.
These briefs, and a court's agreement with their argument, should
not come as any surprise to knowledgeable observers. During the
1970s and 1980s, many pro-ERA advocates insisted that there was "no
connection" between ERAs and abortion, but NRLC warned otherwise. As
we predicted, pro-abortion advocacy groups have increasingly
employed the ERA-abortion argument in state courts, and in New
Mexico we saw the devastating result of enacting an ERA that does
not include explicit abortion-neutral language.
Once a court adopts the legal doctrine that a law targeting abortion
is by definition a form of discrimination based on sex, and
therefore impermissible under an ERA, the same doctrine would
invalidate virtually any limitation on abortion. For example, under
this doctrine, the proposed federal ERA would invalidate the federal
Hyde Amendment and all state restrictions on tax-funded abortions.
Likewise, it would nullify any federal or state restrictions even on
partial-birth abortions or third-trimester abortions (since these
are sought only by women). Also vulnerable would be federal and
state "conscience laws," which allow government-supported medical
facilities and personnel -- including religiously affiliated
hospitals -- to refuse to participate in abortions. Moreover, the
ACLU's "Reproductive Freedom Project" published a booklet that
encourages pro-abortion litigators to use state ERAs as legal
weapons against state parental notification and parental consent
laws.
THE REMEDY: AN ABORTION-NEUTRAL AMENDMENT
All of the pernicious results outlined above could be avoided if the
following "abortion-neutral-amendment" -- originally proposed by
Congressman F. James Sensenbrenner in 1983 -- is added:
"Nothing in this Article [the ERA] shall be construed to grant,
secure, or deny any right relating to abortion or the funding
thereof."
This proposed revision would not change the current legal status of
abortion, nor would it permit the ERA itself to be employed for
anti-abortion purposes. Rather, the revision would simply make the
ERA itself neutral regarding abortion policy.
NRLC will withdraw its opposition to the proposed federal ERA if
this abortion-neutral amendment is added.
REGARDING THE THEORY THAT THE ORIGINAL 1972 ERA
IS STILL ALIVE BEFORE THE STATES ("THREE-STATE STRATEGY")
Curiously, at the same time they are urging Congress to approve a
new federal ERA resolution, many ERA proponents insist that the ERA
that Congress approved in 1972 is still eligible for ratification by
state legislatures. They also insist that only three more
ratifications are needed to make the 1972 resolution part of the
Constitution. The legal reasoning behind this "three-state
strategy," originally set forth in 1994, is quite unpersuasive -- so
much so, that not a single state legislature has passed a
ratification resolution in the 15 years since the theory was
concocted.
Based on Rep. Maloney's July 6 letter, we can only conclude that she
must be doubtful about the notion that the 1972 ERA is still alive
before the state legislatures. In fact, Rep. Maloney's letter
acknowledges that "the deadline passed" on the 1972 ERA without
ratification being achieved, and she adds, "We believe Congress
should give the states another chance" (i.e., by proposing a her
new, no-deadline ERA resolution to the states). It would not make
much sense for Congress to begin the entire constitutional amendment
process over again from square one, if the identical language really
was still pending and available for ratification before the state
legislatures.
Additional information on the status of the 1972 ERA, and on the
last vote that occurred in Congress on an ERA (in 1983), appears
after our signatures in this letter.
CONCLUSION
In summary: If the "Equal Rights Amendment" is brought to the House
floor, NRLC will urge adoption of the remedial abortion-neutral
amendment (Sensenbrenner Amendment). If the amendment is not
adopted, NRLC will oppose passage of the ERA, and will include the
roll call on passage in its scorecard of key pro-life roll calls of
the 111th Congress.
Thank you for your consideration of NRLC's position on this
important issue.
Sincerely,
Douglas Johnson
Legislative Director
Susan T. Muskett, J.D.
Senior Legislative Counsel
National Right to Life Committee
512-10th Street, Northwest
Washington, D.C. 20004
http://www.nrlc.org/Federal/era/Index.html
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE 1972 ERA
The 1972 ERA was ratified by 35 legislatures before the seven-year
ratification deadline expired. (Of these, 26 explicitly referred to
the deadline in their resolutions of ratification.) However, five of
these 35 states withdrew their ratifications before the deadline
arrived. The only federal court to consider the issue ruled that
these rescissions were valid.
In 1978, Congress passed a controversial bill, by majority vote,
that purported to extend the ratification deadline for 39 months.
During this disputed "extension," no new states ratified or
rescinded.
In 1981 a federal court ruled that the rescissions were valid, and
also ruled that the purported deadline extension was
unconstitutional. In 1982, the Supreme Court declined to review this
case, holding that the issue was moot because the ERA had failed
ratification with or without the rescissions and with or without the
purported extension. Documentation is posted on the NRLC website at
http://www.nrlc.org/Federal/era/Index.html
In 1983, the House majority (Democratic) leadership also recognized
that the 1972 ERA was dead. They brought to the House floor, under
suspension of the rules, a new resolution containing the same
proposed constitutional amendment, again with a seven-year deadline
-- an effort that, if successful, would have begun the entire
ratification process anew. However, the resolution was defeated on
the floor of the House (278-147, November 15, 1983). Among those
voting "no" were 14 co-sponsors, most of whom were among the
majority who wanted to add the abortion-neutral amendment. Neither
house of Congress has voted on an ERA since that day.
Further documentation on these events is posted at
http://www.nrlc.org/Federal/ERA/index.html
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