Conservative Leader Phyllis Schlafly Dies at 92
She was number 139 on the list.
Phyllis Schlafly, the outspoken conservative activist who
helped defeat the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s and founded the Eagle
Forum political group, has died. She was 92.
Schlafly's family was with her when she died Monday
afternoon of cancer at her home in St. Louis, her son John Schlafly said.
Funeral arrangements are pending, he said.
Schlafly rose to national attention in 1964 with her
self-published book, "A Choice Not an Echo," that became a manifesto
for the far right. The book, which sold three million copies, chronicled the
history of the Republican National Convention and is credited for helping
conservative Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona earn the 1964 GOP nomination.
She later helped lead efforts to defeat the proposed
constitutional amendment that would have outlawed gender discrimination,
galvanizing the party's right. She'd graduated from college while working
overnight at a factory during World War II, her newspaper column appeared in
dozens of newspapers and she was politically active into her 90s — including
attending every convention since her first in 1952. She attended this year's
convention as a Donald Trump delegate.
Yet she told The Associated Press in 2007 that perhaps her
greatest legacy was the Eagle Forum, which she founded in 1972 in suburban St.
Louis, where she lived. The ultraconservative group has chapters in several
states and claims 80,000 members.
"I've taught literally millions of people how to
participate in self-government," Schlafly said. "I think I've built a
wonderful organization of volunteers, mostly women but some men, willing to
spend their time to get good laws and good politicians."
The Eagle Forum pushes for low taxes, a strong military and
English-only education. The group is against efforts it says are pushed by
radical feminists or encroach on U.S. sovereignty, such as guest-worker visas,
according to its website, which describes the Equal Rights Amendment as having
had a "hidden agenda of tax-funded abortions and same-sex marriages."
The group said in a statement on its website announcing
Schlafly's death that her "focus from her earliest days until her final
ones was protecting the family, which she understood as the building block of
life."
As momentum grew in the 1970s for the Equal Rights Amendment,
Schlafly became its most outspoken critic — and was vilified by its supporters.
She had a pie smashed into her face and pig's blood thrown on her, and feminist
Betty Friedan once told Schlafly, "I'd like to burn you at the
stake." She was chastised in a 1970s "Doonesbury" — a framed
copy of which hung on her office wall.
"What I am defending is the real rights of women,"
Schlafly said at the time. "A woman should have the right to be in the
home as a wife and mother."
Thirty-five states ratified the amendment, three short of
the necessary 38. Schlafly said amendment supporters couldn't prove it was
needed.
"They were never able to show women would get any
benefit out of it," she told the AP in 2007. "It (the U.S. Constitution)
is already sex-neutral. Women already have all the rights that men have."
Saint Louis University history professor Donald Critchlow,
who profiled Schlafly in his 2005 book, "Phyllis Schlafly and Grassroots
Conservatism: A Woman's Crusade," said the defeat of the amendment helped
revive conservatism and helped pave the way for Ronald Reagan's election in
1980.
"What the ERA (defeat) did was show the right, and
especially Reagan strategists, that a new constituency could be tapped to
revitalize the right. It allowed the right to take over the party,"
Critchlow told the AP shortly after his book was written.
Schlafly was born Aug. 15, 1924, and grew up in
Depression-era St. Louis. Her parents were Republican but not politically
involved.
Her own activism was born partly out of convenience. With
the country involved in World War II during her college years, Schlafly worked
the graveyard shift at the St. Louis Ordnance Plant. Her job included testing
ammunition by firing machine guns. She would get off work at 8 a.m., attend
morning classes, then sleep in the middle of the day before doing it all over
again.
The schedule limited her options for a major. "In order
to pick classes to fit my schedule I picked political science," Schlafly
recalled in the 2007 interview.
She graduated from Washington University in 1944, when she
was 19. Her first taste of real politics came at age 22, when she guided the
1946 campaign of Republican congressional candidate Claude Bakewell, helping
him to a major upset win.
In 1952, with her young family living in nearby Alton,
Illinois, Schlafly's husband, attorney John Schlafly Jr., was approached about
running for Congress. He declined, but she ran and narrowly lost in a
predominantly Democratic district. She also ran unsuccessfully for Congress in
1970.
Schlafly earned a master's degree in government from Harvard
in 1945. She enrolled in Washington University School of Law in 1976, and at
age 51, graduated 27th in a class of 204.
Schlafly received an honorary degree at Washington
University's commencement in 2008. Though some students and faculty silently
protested by getting up from their seats and turning their backs to the stage,
Schlafly called it "a happy day. I'm just sorry for those who tried to
rain on a happy day."
Citing Schlafly's views about homosexuals, women and
immigrants — she was an outspoken opponent of same-sex marriage, abortion
rights and loosening U.S. border restrictions — protesters said she went
against the most fundamental principles for which the university stood.
Schlafly remained active in conservative politics well into
her later years, when she was still writing a column that appeared in 100
newspapers, doing radio commentaries on more than 460 stations and publishing a
monthly newsletter.
Schlafly endorsed Trump in early March and introduced the
then-GOP front-runner at a St. Louis rally.
"Phyllis Schlafly is a conservative icon who led
millions to action, reshaped the conservative movement, and fearlessly battled
globalism and the 'kingmakers' on behalf of America's workers and
families," Trump said in a statement Monday. "I was honored to spend
time with her during this campaign."
Schlafly's husband died in 1993. She is survived by six
children, 16 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
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