Why We Need An Equal Rights Amendment...
Mr.Speaker, when a young woman graduates from college
and starts looking for a job, she is likely to have
a frustrating and even demeaning experience ahead of
her. If she walks into an office for an interview, the
first question she will be asked is, “Do you type?’’
There is a calculated system of prejudice that lies
unspoken behind that question. Why is it acceptable
for women to be secretaries, librarians, and teachers,
but totally unacceptable for them to be managers, administrators,
doctors, lawyers, and Members of Congress. The unspoken
assumption is that women are different. They do not
have executive ability orderly minds, stability, leadership
skills, and they are too emotional. It has been observed
before, that society for a long time, discriminated
against another minority, the blacks, on the same basis
- that they were different and inferior. The happy little
homemaker and the contented “old darkey”
on the plantation were both produced by prejudice. As
a black person, I am no stranger to race prejudice.
But the truth is that in the political world I have
been far oftener discriminated against because I am
a woman than because I am black. Prejudice against blacks
is becoming unacceptable although it will take years
to eliminate it. But it is doomed because, slowly, white
America is beginning to admit that it exists. Prejudice
against women is still acceptable. There is very little
understanding yet of the immorality involved in double
pay scales and the classification of most of the better
jobs as “for men only.” More than half of
the population of the United States is female. But women
occupy only 2 percent of the managerial positions. They
have not even reached the level of tokenism yet No women
sit on the AFL-CIO council or Supreme Court There have
been only two women who have held Cabinet rank, and
at present there are none. Only two women now hold ambassadorial
rank in the diplomatic corps. In Congress, we are down
to one Senator and 10 Representatives. Considering that
there are about 3 1/2 million more women in the United
States than men, this situation is outrageous. It is
true that part of the problem has been that women have
not been aggressive in demanding their rights. This
was also true of the black population for many years.
They submitted to oppression and even cooperated with
it. Women have done the same thing. But now there is
an awareness of this situation particularly among the
younger segment of the population. As in the field of
equal rights for blacks, Spanish-Americans, the Indians,
and other groups, laws will not change such deep-seated
problems overnight But they can be used to provide protection
for those who are most abused, and to begin the process
of evolutionary change by compelling the insensitive
majority to reexamine it’s unconscious attitudes.
It is for this reason that I wish to introduce today
a proposal that has been before every Congress for the
last 40 years and that sooner or later must become part
of the basic law of the land — the equal rights
amendment. Let me note and try to refute two of the
commonest arguments that are offered against this amendment.
One is that women are already protected under the law
and do not need legislation. Existing laws are not adequate
to secure equal rights for women. Sufficient proof of
this is the concentration of women in lower paying,
menial, unrewarding jobs and their incredible scarcity
in the upper level jobs. If women are already equal,
why is it such an event whenever one happens to be elected
to Congress? It is obvious that discrimination exists.
Women do not have the opportunities that men do. And
women that do not conform to the system, who try to
break with the accepted patterns, are stigmatized as
‘’odd’’ and “unfeminine.”
The fact is that a woman who aspires to be chairman
of the board, or a Member of the House, does so for
exactly the same reasons as any man. Basically, these
are that she thinks she can do the job and she wants
to try. A second argument often heard against the equal
rights amendment is that is would eliminate legislation
that many States and the Federal Government have enacted
giving special protection to women and that it would
throw the marriage and divorce laws into chaos. As for
the marriage laws, they are due for a sweeping reform,
and an excellent beginning would be to wipe the existing
ones off the books. Regarding special protection for
working women, I cannot understand why it should be
needed. Women need no protection that men do not need.
What we need are laws to protect working people, to
guarantee them fair pay, safe working conditions, protection
against sickness and layoffs, and provision for dignified,
comfortable retirement. Men and women need these things
equally. That one sex needs protection more than the
other is a male supremacist myth as ridiculous and unworthy
of respect as the white supremacist myths that society
is trying to cure itself of at this time.
Equal Rights For Women Nominating Speech by Shirley
Chisholm, Addressed To The United States House Of Representatives
in consideration of the failed Equal Rights Amendment,
Washington, DC: May 21, 1969