This morning, Biden declared on X that “the Equal Rights Amendment is now the law of the land.” Well, there you have it: The Constitution has a 28th amendment, and women’s rights have been enshrined across the country. Or not. Biden can’t change the Constitution, because the Constitution doesn’t allow him to.
PHILADELPHIA — Progressive activists in Congress have put mounting pressure on President Joe Biden to direct the archivist of the United States to certify and publish the Equal Rights Amendment — which would become the first explicit mention of women in the U.
President Joe Biden has weighed in on the decades-long Equal Rights Amendment debate, but does his statement hold any weight? Experts say no.
“Equality is a fundamental promise of our democracy. That is why the Equal Rights Amendment belongs in our Constitution,” Harris said in a statement. “It makes our nation stronger, and it is the law of the land because the American people have spoken in states across our nation.”
The Equal Rights Amendment, first proposed over a century ago by then former suffragist Alice Paul, seeks to enshrine gender equality in the U.S. Constitution, ensuring that "equality of rights ...
- Alice Paul, background holding rolled-up banner, takes part with suffragettes marching from the Women's Party Headquarters to the White House in the spring of 1917, to further their
US President Joe Biden opined Friday without legal effect that the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), which ensures equal rights on the basis of sex, has been added to the Constitution as the 28th
President Joe Biden's executive opinion on the Equal Rights Amendment comes in the final days of his presidency. Some local advocates wish he and Democrats had acted sooner.
A crowd filled the Minnesota State Capitol Rotunda Tuesday morning in support of the Equal Rights Amendment ... Leigh Finke, DFL-Saint Paul, announced plans to introduce the amendment during the 2025 legislative session. "Laws can be repealed, changed ...
PAUL — Chants from the Minnesota Capitol ... a.m., ahead of the session’s start at noon, in support of the Equal Rights Amendment, a constitutional amendment that would be on Minnesotans ...
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