Today I'm affirming what I have long believed and what three-fourths of the states have ratified:
— President Biden (@POTUS) January 17, 2025
The 28th Amendment is the law of the land, guaranteeing all Americans equal rights and protections under the law regardless of their sex. pic.twitter.com/oZtS6Q89zG
COMMUNITY NOTED In a even more r-slurred than expected move, Biden say the ERA is ratified, Even though it isn't??? This seriously is r-slurred and beyond parody.
https://x.com/POTUS/status/1880271367569895830
Community Note by @Impassionata
The Constitution does not specify a time limit for states to ratify the ERA and 38 states have ratified it. The dramatic call is to assert that it is in fact the law of the land. Women will now be drafted.
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He's just riffing off of Trump so he doesn't get clowned too much when they go fish and eat at a diner together
Edit: More detail (too much probably)
So, this shit was proposed back in the fricking 70s, and Phyllis Schlafy created great sneed opposing it. Only in 2020 did Virginia decide to fricking ratify it-putting it over 2/3rds after it became relevant again.
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The archivist said:
So still needs to be run through the courts.
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Basically—The ERA was passed by Congress in 1972 with a seven-year ratification deadline set in the proposing clause, not the amendment itself. That deadline was later extended to 1982, but by then, only 35 states had ratified—three short of the required 38 under Article V. Since 2017, Nevada, Illinois, and Virginia have ratified the ERA, seemingly reaching the 38-state threshold. This raises legal and constitutional questions about the validity of the original deadline, whether it can be retroactively extended or waived, and who—Congress or the courts—has the authority to decide.
Congress controls the amendment process under Article V, including proposing amendments and choosing the mode of ratification, but its authority to impose deadlines remains unclear. The Supreme Court in Dillon v. Gloss (1921) upheld Congress's power to set "reasonable" deadlines, stating that amendments must reflect contemporary public will. However, Coleman v. Miller (1939) left open whether Congress can extend or revive an expired deadline. Courts generally avoid these disputes, treating them as political questions.
In January 2020, the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel declared the ERA's deadline expired. Virginia, Nevada, and Illinois sued to compel certification of the ERA, but in Virginia v. Ferriero (2021), a federal court dismissed the case, ruling the states lacked standing and that the issue is Congress's to resolve. The case is now on appeal in the D.C. Circuit.
If the Supreme Court takes the case, it could affirm Dillon and uphold Congress's power to enforce deadlines, invalidating the ERA. It might leave the issue to Congress or rule Congress can retroactively extend or remove the deadline, validating the late ratifications. Alternatively, the Court could declare the deadline non-binding since it wasn't part of the amendment's text, making the ERA effective once the 38th state ratified in 2020. This last option would face intense political backlash.
Symbolic thing. Sneed fuel. Trying to plant a seed for future action. Not going to really matter probably, but Trump is a wild card and might agree with it.
But even that won't matter because the USSC has to agree that the deadline was tolled or moot.
Tl;dr the ruling class has graciously decided to give you proles something to do instead of asking about UAPs and egg prices
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