Nobody has answered what I wrote here: There is not a single statement where Ellen White says that women should not be ordained.
You have not provided a single quotation where Ellen White forbids the ordination of women.
In the Bible, when things aren't even an issue, one often can't find a passage that positively affirms the correct side of the issue. For example, can you show me a verse in the NT where Gentile Christians are commanded to keep the Sabbath?
(For those who insist on such a text, it is helpful to ask them if they believe in tithing. If they say yes, tell them you agree, and then ask them where in the NT it says that Gentile Christians are supposed to tithe.)
But here is a quote that I think is applicable:
Eve had been perfectly happy by her husband's side in her Eden home; but, like restless modern Eves, she was flattered with the hope of entering a higher sphere than that which God had assigned her. In attempting to rise above her original position, she fell far below it. A similar result will be reached by all who are unwilling to take up cheerfully their life duties in accordance with God's plan. In their efforts to reach positions for which He has not fitted them, many are leaving vacant the place where they might be a blessing. In their desire for a higher sphere, many have sacrificed true womanly dignity and nobility of character, and have left undone the very work that Heaven appointed them.
Note that the preceding paragraph speaks of Eve being placed in subjection to her husband. So Ellen White speaks of restless modern Eves in that context.
Note also that 3T 483 repeats the above, and then adds the following:
There is a work for women that is even more important and elevating than the duties of the king upon his throne. They may mold the minds of their children and shape their characters so that they may be useful in this world and that they may become sons and daughters of God. ... There is enough necessary and important labor in this world of need and suffering without wasting precious moments for ornamentation or display. ... If they are indeed the daughters of God they will be partakers of the divine nature. They will be stirred with deepest pity, as was their divine Redeemer, as they see the corrupting influences in society. They will be in sympathy with Christ, and in their sphere, as they have ability and
opportunity, will work to save perishing souls as Christ worked in His exalted sphere for the benefit of man.
A neglect on the part of woman to follow God's plan in her creation, an effort to reach for important positions which He has not qualified her to fill, leaves vacant the position that she could fill to acceptance. In getting out of her sphere, she loses true womanly dignity and nobility.
The whole issue got started last fall over the E60 policy, which is all about "important positions." It's all about whether or not a woman can serve as a conference or mission president. And the NPUC press release about their May 16 decision is about that very same thing: important positions. The NPUC press release says nothing about ordination.
Therefore, I think the above SoP warnings are applicable to the present situation, except that today we also have restless modern Adams helping the restless modern Eves reach for important positions, helping them lose true womanly dignity and nobility.