In 1972, it seemed ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment was all but a sure thing.

First introduced to Congress in 1923 by suffragist Alice Paul, the proposed 27th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which stated "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex," had passed with both bipartisan and public support and was sent to the state legislatures for ratification.

But the ERA included a seven-year ratification time limit clause (which Congress extended to 1982), and although 35 of 38 state legislatures needed for a three-quarters majority had voted to ratify the amendment, its proponents hadn鈥檛 counted on a conservative grassroots movement led by activist and lawyer Phyllis Schlafly that would ultimately lead to the ERA鈥檚 defeat, falling three states shorts.

"What I am defending is the real rights of women,"  at the time. "A woman should have the right to be in the home as a wife and mother."

ERA: Open to Interpretation

Phyllis Schafly
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Phyllis Schlafly, pictured right holding a sign, demonstrating in front of the White House, on February 4, 1977. She was the chairwoman of STOP ERA which believed President Carter was "using his wife" to promote the Equal Rights Amendment.

Don Critchlow, author of , and the Katzin Family Professor at Arizona State University, says one issue was the amendment was loose in its wording.

鈥淭hat meant it was going to have to be interpreted by the courts and she鈥攁nd her large number of followers鈥攚ere concerned that the courts would interpret it as abortion on demand, same-sex marriage and women in the draft.鈥 he says. 鈥淔urthermore, she felt that much of the legislation protecting women in pay and gender discrimination had already been enacted.鈥

The ERA got as far as it did, due to the work of second-wave feminists who had lobbied for years for its passage. Those who fought for the amendment included prominent figures such as Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan and Jane Fonda. Brandy Faulkner, a visiting assistant professor at Virginia Tech鈥檚 College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, says the feminist momentum influenced not only Congress, but also the U.S. Supreme Court. Faulkner points out that Eisenstadt v. Baird, which established the right of unmarried people to possess contraception on the same basis as married couples, passed in 1971鈥攋ust a year after Congress passed the ERA.

Schlafly鈥檚 strategy to defeat the ERA was to convince women that equality between men and women was undesirable.

鈥淪he consistently painted worst-case scenarios which, when juxtaposed with the lives of average white women at that time, led many of them to believe that inequality wasn't so bad after all," Faulkner says. 鈥淪he was a biological determinist who thought that the physiological differences between men and women should be the primary determiner of their roles. She advocated for what she thought was a privileged position for women in society."

One example Schlafly offered was that women did not have to register for the draft鈥攁 fact that Schlafly argued was a female privilege. Schlafly also applauded that fact that for most social welfare programs, women were assumed to be dependents of their husbands, and that entitled them to some government services and benefits. 

Schlafly's conservative values led her to staunchly oppose feminism in all of its forms, Faulkner says, and the ERA was certainly part of the feminist agenda.

鈥淪he feared that greater sex equality would lead to a moral decline in society by changing the roles that women had traditionally held,鈥 she says.

Shlafly's Effective Advocacy

Phyllis Schafly
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Phyllis Schafly leads members opposed to the equal rights amendment in a song about the pro-ERA forces plan for a national demonstration in the capitol city. The song's lyrics included, "You better look out, I'm telling you why, they're planning their trip, your votes to buy, Bella's bunch is coming to town."

Critchlow, author of In Defense of Populism (to be released in the fall of 2020), says Schlafly, who died at age 92 in 2016, built up her following through her work with the National Federation of Republican Women, which became the basis for Stop ERA.

鈥淪he was articulate, quite intelligent and extremely well organized and she was deadly on the debate stage,鈥 he says.

Schlafly鈥檚 strategy was to organize grassroots women in the multiple states to put pressure on the state legislatures to stop or rescind ERA passage.

鈥淚鈥檓 absolutely convinced that it would have passed without her involvement,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he was able to single-handedly organize the Stop ERA movement.鈥

As the Stop ERA movement gained momentum, Critchlow adds, it was able to reach new constituencies, particularly in the Southern battleground states.

鈥淭he women involved in southern state organizations were able to tap into the churches, especially the evangelical churches,鈥 he says. 鈥淪chlafly was Catholic, but she was able to reach out not only to Protestants, but also to Mormons, as well as some traditional Jews, too.鈥

By the late 1970s, Schlafly had risen in prominence for pushing back against the feminist movement. Her book, The Power of the Positive Woman, helped cement her following. But public opinion of Schlafly remained divided.

"Women who were opposed to her absolutely despised her," Critchlow says. 

Following the ERA鈥檚 defeat, Schlafly and Stop ERA threw a party, according to a 1982 report in the .

鈥淩onald Reagan sent a congratulatory telegram," according to the Post, "The band played 鈥楧ing, Dong, the Witch is Dead.鈥 Conservative Digest editor John Lofton, who wore dark glasses and a striped party hat, put it this way: 鈥榃e're here to celebrate a death, to dance on a grave.鈥欌

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