Alabama, 4 other states prevail in suit to block Equal Rights Amendment certification alpolitics
MONTGOMERY, Ala. - A federal appeals court has ruled against backers of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, which would have become the 28th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution had it been ratified before a Congressionally-mandated deadline ran out in the 1970s.
Illinois and Virginia quickly followed Nevada’s lead, becoming the 37th and 38th states to greenlight the ERA. That milestone prompted supporters to proclaim the ERA had reached the constitutionally-required approval of three-quarters of the states to become the law of the land. The three states then filed a lawsuit aimed at forcing the Archivist to certify the amendment’s official ratification, though Virginia later dropped out of the suit.
“Today, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit agreed with our argument that Nevada and Illinois cannot purport to ratify a proposed amendment that expired decades ago and then force the Archivist to sneak the Equal Rights Amendment into the Constitution,” said Marshall. “We are glad the court rejected plaintiffs’ calls to unconstitutionally amend our Constitution,” continued Marshall.
Brasil Últimas Notícias, Brasil Manchetes
Similar News:Você também pode ler notícias semelhantes a esta que coletamos de outras fontes de notícias.
Will the Equal Rights Amendment Finally Be Added to the US Constitution?This week the Equal Rights Amendment, which would codify gender equality in the U.S. Constitution, will get its first hearing in 40 years when, on Tuesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee meets to discuss a joint resolution to finally ratify the ERA.
Consulte Mais informação »
The Equal Rights Amendment is dead and should stay that wayFor the past few years, Democrats have been trying to resurrect the Equal Rights Amendment, a constitutional amendment proposed to the states in the 1970s that failed to win enough support to be ratified. Its deadline for ratification has long since passed — 1982 was the official cutoff date — but…
Consulte Mais informação »
Want to protect life? Oppose the revival of the Equal Rights AmendmentLike the resilient undead, the Equal Rights Amendment is back. This time, the ERA has emerged from its grave in the form of a joint House and Senate resolution to remove the expiration date on the constitutional amendment. (Yes, the one that already expired in 1982.)
Consulte Mais informação »
Proposed constitutional amendment would raise the bar for some citizen initiativesThe Utah House approved a proposed constitutional amendment that would raise the bar for citizen initiatives that include tax increases.
Consulte Mais informação »
First Amendment should protect Fox News from defamation lawsuit'Fox probably needs to swallow some bitter pills. Still, the network has a stronger legal-constitutional case against the defamation case than most news coverage right now is admitting,' QuinHillyer writes.
Consulte Mais informação »
Alabama only state where Medicaid won’t cover some breast cancer screeningLifesaving tests for genes that increase risks of breast cancer still aren’t available to Alabama Medicaid recipients, despite a push by advocates who say the agency should offer the screening available in all other states.
Consulte Mais informação »