NOW Cheers Introduction of Equal Rights Amendment;
New Opportunity to Gain Constitutional Equality for Women
Statement of NOW President Kim Gandy
From NOW National Action Center, March 19, 2005
The National Organization for Women welcomes the reintroduction of the Equal Rights amendment and the renewal of the national dialogue on constitutional equality for women.
We commend the dedication of Representative Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., to achieving constitutional equality.
Properly interpreted, an equal rights amendment will be a permanent guarantee of basic human rights for women—not subjecting our fundamental rights and liberties to changing political cycles.
Women were not included in the Constitution at the founding of our country, and for the entire history of the United States women have been purposely disadvantaged by the lack of a Constitutional guarantee of equality.
There are decades of evidence—documented discriminatory patterns in employment, education, insurance, health care, Social Security and pensions, military service, the justice system and numerous other areas.
Despite the fact that the 14th Amendment to the Constitution is frequently cited as a source of protection for women, that amendment was never intended as a prohibition against sex discrimination and does not provide equal protection for women.
Painful experience within our judicial system—particularly over the last three decades—provides ample evidence that only a clear constitutional declaration of equal protection and a standard of strict scrutiny will achieve the goal of equal protection for women and men.
Not only must an equality amendment provide protection against sex discrimination in the economic realm, but it must also be more robust.
It must prohibit discrimination based on pregnancy or sexual orientation, and must protect the millions of women whose reproductive rights are being increasingly narrowed and denied.
A new equal rights amendment must guarantee a woman's right to privacy and bodily integrity.
Women need a constitutional equality amendment to effectively counter what is already a full-blown campaign to weaken and limit civil rights and to diminish women's rights.
As we look to federal courts where conservative ideologues now dominate judicial thought and action, progressive leaders must stimulate debate among our elected representatives, women's rights advocates and the public-at-large on the meaning of equal protection for the sexes under the law.
|