By George Will
Thursday, June 14, 2018
Karl Marx was no more mistaken than usual when he said
that historic people and events appear twice, first as tragedy, then as farce.
Today’s advocates of a musty fragment of the 1970s, the Equal Rights Amendment,
are demonstrating that something that begins as farce can reappear as tragedy,
because abuse of the Constitution is tragic.
With Illinois slouching toward bankruptcy, its
legislature must have better things to do, yet it recently ratified the ERA.
But can a legislative cadaver be ratified?
On March 22, 1972, a stampeding Congress sent to the
states for ratification this constitutional amendment: “Equality of rights
under the law shall not be denied or abridged . . . on account of sex.” Without
seriously considering what this would add to the 14th Amendment’s guarantee to
“any person” of “equal protection of the laws,” the House and Senate passed it
354–24 and 84–8, respectively. The irony of a gallant Congress behaving
cavalierly in several senses was surely lost on ERA supporters.
Legislators sworn to “support and defend” the
Constitution voted to clutter it with language the meaning of which they did
not — could not — know. The meaning was irrelevant to the main purpose, which
was to grandstand with an amendment the first, and for many advocates the
sufficient, function of which was “consciousness-raising” — to “put women in
the Constitution.” Another purpose was to arm liberal judges with language into
which they could pour whatever content they wanted. So, the ERA would either be
a constitutional nullity or license for unconstrained judicial improvising.
Because the Constitution’s Framers believed that the most
important decisions should not be taken on slender majorities, and that
frequent amendments would impair the Constitution’s majesty, they required
amendments to pass both houses of Congress with two-thirds majorities and
receive ratification by three-quarters of the states. Since then,
constitutional morality has evolved the principle that ratification should
occur during a predetermined period of deliberation, reflecting (in the Supreme
Court’s words) a “sufficiently contemporaneous” consensus of at least
(nowadays) 38 states “at relatively the same period.”
So, Congress, as has been customary since the 18th
Amendment (Prohibition, 1919), required ERA ratification within seven years,
which was generous: The first ten amendments (a.k.a. the Bill of Rights) were
ratified in 27 months. Leaving aside the 27th Amendment pertaining to
congressional-salary increases (dormant for 203 years, resuscitated in the
anti-Congress fever of 1992), the average time for ratifying amendments since
the first ten has been 16 months, and no amendment has taken even four years.
The 26th Amendment (lowering the voting age to 18) took less than four months.
Hawaii ratified the ERA the day Congress passed it.
Nebraska, rushing to be second, did it wrong and had to do it again. Twenty
states ratified it in three months, most without hearings. In January 1977,
four years and ten months into the process, Indiana became the 35th and last
state to ratify it. Twenty-six of the 35 explicitly referred to the seven-year
deadline in their resolutions of ratification. When the seven years expired,
those supposedly seeking equal treatment for women sought and received special
treatment. By a simple majority, not the two-thirds required for constitutional
amendments, a supine Congress extended the deadline for 39 months — but only
for states that had not ratified it, in order to prevent new rescissions. It
died in 1982, in its 123rd month, having gone longer (65 months) without a
single additional state’s ratification than it took to get all of its original
35. By which time five of the 35 (including, deliciously, Nebraska) had
rescinded their ratifications.
The only federal court to rule on the four-year extension
held it unconstitutional, and said all rescissions were valid. Now, however,
ERA advocates argue that the clock can never expire on ratification — states
can vote over and over (as Illinois has done) until they ratify it, and no
ratification can be rescinded. In 2017, Nevada ratified the cadaver, so ERA
proponents insist they are just one state away from victory. But,
inconveniently, ERA supporters in Congress have repeatedly reintroduced it
(most recently in January 2017), thereby conceding that the process must begin
again.
Which is farcical. In 1972, there were 13 women in the
House and two in the Senate. Today there are 90 in the House and 23 in the
Senate, reflecting 46 years of legal and social changes that a prompt
ratification of the ERA would not have hastened and that consignment of the ERA
to the attic of 1970s nostalgia — hip-hugging bell-bottoms, etc. — will not
impede.
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