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For These Women, The Equal Rights Amendment Has Been A Decades-Long Battle

Equal Rights Amendment supporters demonstrate outside the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond on Jan. 8.
Steve Helber
/
AP
Equal Rights Amendment supporters demonstrate outside the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond on Jan. 8.

Updated at 7:59 p.m. ET

Andrea Miller first heard about the Equal Rights Amendment from her mother.

"It basically went, 'I'm very interested in the Equal Rights Amendment; I disagree with it a little — I think women are superior to men — but we'll settle for being equal,' " Miller said with a laugh. "That was basically what my mother told me."

Miller is now 66 and living in Virginia, which became the 38th state — the total needed — to ratify the ERA. It follows a decades-long fight over the proposed constitutional amendment banning sex discrimination.

As an eighth-grader in the Chicago suburbs in the late 1960s, Miller recalls helping her mother with a family business delivering mail door to door — they used it to drum up support for the ERA.

"We took our little ERA flyers and stuck them in the bag of junk mail," Miller said.

Andrea Miller started working on behalf of the ERA in the late 1960s as a middle schooler. At 66, she's eager to see it ratified.
/ Courtesy of Andrea Miller
/
Courtesy of Andrea Miller
Andrea Miller started working on behalf of the ERA in the late 1960s as a middle schooler. At 66, she's eager to see it ratified.

A few years later, Anne Schlafly Cori also was learning about the issue from her mom — the now-deceased Phyllis Schlafly, the ERA's most prominent opponent.

"The telephone rang, day and evening, with calls and questions from supporters, and from reporters, on ERA. It was a constant in my childhood," she recalled.

Now 55 and living in St. Louis, Schlafly Cori has continued her mother's work promoting conservative causes. She fears the ERA would make it harder to restrict abortion — even if the Supreme Court eventually overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide.

"I think that a lot of concerns about ERA have not changed from the 1970s to today, because the end result of ERA is to make men and women interchangeable in every situation," Schlafly Cori said.

Schlafly Cori said she believes there are biological differences between men and women that sometimes require differences in the law.

Elise Bouc of Stop ERA Illinois warns of an end to separate prison facilities for female inmates or that women could be forced into a military draft.

Anne Schlafly Cori, a conservative activist and the daughter of the late Phyllis Schlafly, has continued her mother's mission of opposing the ERA.
/ Courtesy of the Eagle Forum
/
Courtesy of the Eagle Forum
Anne Schlafly Cori, a conservative activist and the daughter of the late Phyllis Schlafly, has continued her mother's mission of opposing the ERA.

Bouc has opposed the Equal Rights Amendment since she was a teenager in the 1970s. She believes many women who support it don't understand it.

"It's very emotional for them; they're very attached to it from the '70s; they believe it's going to be the cure-all for all their problems," Bouc said. "And what they don't understand is it's really not going to add any benefit to them; it's only going to add harm."

Donna Granski, 73, an activist and retired teacher from Midlothian, Va., remembers coming to the state Capitol in Richmond in the 1970s, lining a walkway holding candles to show support for the ERA.

She said this is, indeed, an emotional moment.

"It means that my country looks at females the same way it looks at males," Granski said. "It means that my granddaughters can pick up a copy of the United States Constitution and see that they are enshrined in it."

Despite Virginia ratifying the amendment, it would face an uncertain future. The U.S. Justice Department has issued an opinion saying that the deadline for the ERA to be added to the Constitution has expired.

If that stands, it could mean another round of debates over the amendment in statehouses nationwide.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Sarah McCammon is a National Correspondent covering the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast for NPR. Her work focuses on political, social and cultural divides in America, including abortion and reproductive rights, and the intersections of politics and religion. She's also a frequent guest host for NPR news magazines, podcasts and special coverage.