Conservative Counterattack 831
Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey (1992), the
Supreme Court allowed states to impose certain con-
ditions, such as tests of viability and waiting periods,
before abortions could be performed. But well into
the twenty-first century,Roe v. Waderemained the
law of the land.
Conservatives were more successful in contest-
ing the ERA, which seemed headed to prompt rati-
fication. In 1973 Phyllis Schlafly, a former vice
president of the National Federation of Republican
Women and publisher of a conservative newsletter,
spearheaded a nationwide campaign against ratifi-
cation of the ERA. She argued that it would subject
young women to the military draft, deprive
divorced women of alimony and child custody, and
make married women legally responsible for pro-
viding 50 percent of household income. As the
recession after 1973 dragged the economy down,
Schlafly’s words struck a responsive chord among
anxious housewives and low-wage-earning women
who doubted they could survive the recessionary
economy on their own. The ratification campaign
ARKANSAS
KANSAS
NEBRASKA
MISSOURI
IOWA
WISCONSIN
MINNESOTA
TEXAS
SOUTH
DAKOTA
NORTH
DAKOTA
NEW
MEXICO
OKLAHOMA
MONTANA
WYOMING
COLORADO
ARIZONA
UTAH
NEVADA
OREGON
WASHINGTON
CALIFORNIA
IDAHO
LOUISIANA
MICHIGAN
INDIANA
ILLINOIS
OHIO
ALABAMA
MISS. GEORGIA
SOUTH
CAROLINA
NORTH
CAROLINA
VIRGINIA
WEST
VIRGINIA
KENTUCKY
TENNESSEE
NEW
YORK
PENNSYLVANIA
N.J.
CONN.
MASS.
VT.
N.H.
MAINE
R.I.
MD.DEL.
FLORIDA
CANADA
Gulf of
Mexico
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
States ratifying ERA 1972
States ratifying ERA 1973
States ratifying ERA 1974–77
States ratifying ERA 1972,
later rescinding ERA
States unratified
ALASKA
HAWAII
Failure of the Equal Rights Amendment, 1972–1982The states that failed to ratify ERA were mostly in the South and the predominantly
Mormon Rockies. The states that NOW regarded as pivotal were Illinois, North Carolina, and Virginia.
Phyllis Schlafly drew much of her support from working-class
women who were left vulnerable by the recession after 1973.