The National Archives told the Daily Caller News Foundation on Friday that it maintains its position that the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) is not part of the Constitution — even after President Joe Biden declared otherwise.
The last time Joe Biden packed up and left office, he took with him thousands of papers from his decades in public service — including some classified documents that should have gone to the National Archives for safekeeping. That move spawned a federal ...
It’s unlikely Biden’s statement will have any impact. A girl is seen in between “ERA NOW” signs as people hold a rally in front of the National Archives to highlight President Joe Biden’s decision to declare the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA ...
If Biden really wanted to make the ERA the “law of the land,” he would have needed to direct the head of the National Archives to ignore the Department of Justice. But he didn't do that—or really anything for women's rights during his presidency.
The president’s announcement on Friday was one of many sweeping executive moves he’s making in his final days in office.
President Joe Biden’s declaration the Equal Rights Amendment is “the law of the land” likely only sets up more debates for Congress and the courts
President Joe Biden on Friday declared that the Equal Rights Amendment is the law of the land, attempting to ratify a 28th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in a last-ditch effort to protect women’s reproductive rights.
The outgoing president’s move is mostly symbolic, but he has given the push for the 28th Amendment some new momentum.
President Joe Biden has weighed in on the decades-long Equal Rights Amendment debate, but does his statement hold any weight? Experts say no.
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden announced Friday that the Equal Rights Amendment ... Presidents do not have any role in the amendment process. The leader of the National Archives had previously said that the amendment cannot be certified because it ...
President Joe Biden renewed his call for the Equal Right Amendment to be ratified, but is stopping short of taking any action on the matter in his final days in office.
Trump valet Walt Nauta and Mar-a-Lago property manager Carlos De Oliveira were charged with conspiring with Trump to obstruct an FBI investigation into the hoarding of classified documents that the Republican took with him when he left the White House after his first presidential term.