[Congressional Record Volume 166, Number 29 (Wednesday, February 12, 2020)]
[House]
[Page H1114]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1715
EQUAL RIGHTS FOR WOMEN
(Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts asked and was given permission to address
the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend her remarks.)
Ms. CLARK of Massachusetts. Madam Speaker, in 1970 in this very
Chamber the first African American woman elected to Congress, Shirley
Chisholm, said:
There is an unspoken assumption that women are different. Artificial
distinctions between persons must be wiped out of the law.
Congresswoman Chisholm was calling for the passage of the equal
rights amendment. Fifty years later and a century after securing the
right to vote, I stand before you, Madam Speaker, with the same call to
action.
I stand before you as a Member of the 116th Congress with the
greatest proportion of women Members in our history and a female
Speaker, but yet as a woman, my rights remain unprotected in the
Constitution.
The majority of Americans are women, but yet our Constitution does
not fully and explicitly include our mothers, daughters, grandmothers,
aunts, and neighbors.
Our Constitution is not just a founding document. It is a
foundational document to equality under the law. It is time to reflect
the truths that have become self-evident, that all people are created
equal. It is time to pass the equal rights amendment.
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