Storming the Hill – Request for Equal Rights Amendment U.S. Congressional Hearings

Good Day!

On August 25, 2017, Three State Strategy Equal Rights Amendment advocates gathered at the Kennedy Caucus Room Photo Credit: Kylie Khan

This year’s 3rd Annual 2017 DC Women’s Equality Day Advocacy Action and Celebration was a huge success!  While the group that attended the Advocacy Action was small, it gave a powerful voice to the reinvigorated efforts to pass the Equal Rights Amendment.

To watch local news coverage of the Advocacy Action Click Here.

To see the YouTube video of the band of advocates laying out the day’s strategy at the Kennedy Caucus Room at the U.S. Senate Click Here.

Meeting at Senator Chuck Grassley’s office with Aaron Cummings urging for hearing on S.J. Res. 5. Photo Credit: Portia Boulger

Meeting at Senator Chuck Grassley’s office with Aaron Cummings urging for hearing on S.J. Res. 5.  Photo Credit: Portia Boulger

The emboldened band of advocates met up at the Kennedy Caucus Room where we were inspired by Nevada State Senator Patricia Spearman, [the legislator] who charged ahead in moving the Nevada Legislature to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment this past on March 22, 2017. Nevada is the 36th state (of the required 38) to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment and the first since the extended deadline of 1979 passed.

We were warmly received by Aaron Cummings, Chief Constitution Counsel and staffer Evelyn Fortier at the office of Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA ), who is the Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee.  We made to request the following two asks:

  1. That Senator Grassley co-sponsor Senator Benjamin Cardin’s (D-MD) bill S.J. Res. 5, a joint resolution that will eliminate the time limit for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, which will prohibit discrimination on account of sex; and
  2. That Senator Grassley, as Senate Judiciary Committee Chair, call for hearings on S.J. Res. 5.

Then the group met with Callam Bruzzone and Jennifer Piatt, two Judiciary Committee staffers who are with Senator Dianne Feinstein’s (D-CA) office to request [that]:

  1. That Senator Feinstein, as an original sponsor of S.J. Res. 5 and the Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, make the resolution her priority and to spend her capital on moving her colleagues to hold hearings on the Equal Rights Amendment; and
  2. That Feinstein also put information up on her website stating that she supports the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment which will empower women, reaffirm the rights of men, as well as provide a U.S. Constitutional Amendment for the Supreme Court Justices to rely upon when issues that affect the LBGTQIA Community come before the court.

Following lunch in the cafeteria the group met with Representative Steve King’s (R-IA-4) staffer Suanne Edmiston who was sympathetic to our cause but said she could not speak for the Representative on how he would weigh in on the matter. So just as we had requested of Senator Grassley, we asked the same of King and that is:

  1. That he co-sponsor Representative Jackie Speier’s (D-CA-14) H.J. Res 53; and
  2. That he push for hearings as Chair of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the U.S. Constitution.

We then proceeded to the office of Representative Steve Cohen(D-TN-9), the Ranking Member of the sub-committee, where he came out briefly to speak to our group saying he would not push for hearings at this time because he doubted the Republicans would be receptive. This was a disappointment for when one delays action when one is in a position to at least ask on our behalf for nearly three women are killed every day are victims of domestic violence here in the U.S.A.

I found this to be polarizing the issue that is non-partisan and could not fathom his logic for delaying. Parties come into power and parties lose their power.  Economies go down, economies go up.  The way of the world is circular, but a life stolen whether it be through violence or economic hardship reinforced by the Racial Gender Pay Gap is a shame and a sham. And piecemeal legislation to empower women ‘has no teeth’ without the Equal Rights Amendment

So our next step on the Advocacy Action launch of 2017 federal legislation Washington DC is the Let’s Pass the Equal Rights Amendment program.  We are urging everyone to continue petitioning their U.S. Congressional representatives to co-sponsor S.J. Res. 5 and H.J. Res 53.  To see if your elected official has co-sponsored S.J. Res 5, Click Here.  For H.J. Res 53, Click Here

If they have – AWESOME!  Thank them and then ask them to put it on their website that they have and speak to their colleagues about also coming on board as co-sponsors and holding hearings.

Having reported the above, I also ask that you take a moment to reflect on your personal relationship with God.  If you are a non-believer reflect on what kind of country do you want to live in? Do you want to be inclusive? Do you want to be diverse? Do you want to end racism and sexism? How do you set your moral compass? Where do you find your inspiration?

I myself am inspired by the great spiritual leaders both past and present, from Abraham whose sons Isaac and Ishmael who gave rise to two great nations, to Moses who lead the Israelites out of Egypt, to Queen Esther to begged to save the lives of the Jewish people, to Jesus who gave his life for all people, to Buddha who gave up the life of an Indian Royal to walk amongst the outcast and downtrodden, to Sojourner Truth who valiantly championed the abolition of slavery movement, to Ghandi who fought for Independence, to Martin Luther King, Jr., whose life was taken as he strove to make all equal here in the U.S.A., to my mother-in-law, the Rev. Katrina Martha Van Alsytne Welles Swanson, who along with 10 other brave women, known as the “Philadelphia Eleven,” were the first women priests “irregularly” ordained in the Episcopal Church.

I ask that you forward this to your family, friends, co-workers, neighbors, and network.  It is time that we demand that our elected officials do the work they voted in office to do and that is to serve the people of the United States of America.

I for one do not want to wait one more day for woman to be equal under the law of this land.  So in signing off I leave you with the following:

United we stand, divided we fall

All for one, and one for all

Today, not tomorrow, it is all for all

In a couple of days, I shall give my report on the Celebration of Women’s Equality Day and the amazing performance of 24Words, the Equal Rights Amendment Musical.

Thank you for taking the time to read this blog posting.

Shalom,

Helene de Boissiere – Swanson

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