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Tag: affirmative action

  • ‘Race neutral’ replaces affirmative action. What’s next? | CNN Politics

    ‘Race neutral’ replaces affirmative action. What’s next? | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    When the Supreme Court cut affirmative action out of college admissions programs Thursday, it did not outlaw the goal of achieving diversity, but it set a new “race-neutral” standard for considering applicants.

    That term – “race neutral” – does not appear in the opinion of the court, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, which states that colleges and universities have “concluded, wrongly, that the touchstone of an individual’s identity is not challenges bested, skills built, or lessons learned but the color of their skin.”

    But when Roberts clarifies that students can still refer to their race in admissions essays, explaining challenges they’ve overcome, he and the majority are buying into the idea of race neutrality.

    Justice Clarence Thomas, who wrote his own concurring opinion, uses the term “race neutral” repeatedly, offering it as an antidote to affirmative action.

    Pointing to efforts in California and Michigan to enroll diverse classes at top universities even after voters in those states ended affirmative action, Thomas says race-neutral policies can “achieve the same benefits of racial harmony and equality without any of the burdens and strife generated by affirmative action policies.”

    Justice Sonia Sotomayor shot back at Thomas and the majority, rejecting the term.

    “The majority’s vision of race neutrality will entrench racial segregation in higher education because racial inequality will persist so long as it is ignored,” she wrote.

    For more on this view, read this piece in The Atlantic by scholars Uma Jayakumar and Ibram Kendi: “‘Race Neutral’ Is the New ‘Separate but Equal.’”

    If the experience of California and Michigan – where voters ended affirmative action programs years ago – is any indication, we can expect that the representation of Black and Latino students at top-level universities will fall.

    Those states argued in briefings to the court that their race-neutral efforts have not been completely successful, particularly at top-tier, flagship public schools, in creating environments that are inclusive for all.

    California has, according to its brief, tried race-neutral measures that “run the gamut from outreach programs directed at low-income students and students from families with little college experience, to programs designed to increase UC’s geographic reach, to holistic admissions policies.”

    While it has made strides, it says, there is a shortfall “especially apparent at UC’s most selective campuses, where African American, Native American, and Latinx students are underrepresented and widely report struggling with feelings of racial isolation.”

    In California, half of the college-age population – 18-24 – is Latino, according to data from the Public Policy Institute of California. Compare that with just 27% of enrollees for 2022 at the University of California’s nine undergraduate campuses who the UC system categorizes as Hispanic/Latinx.

    On the other hand, less than 13% of the college-age population is Asian, compared with 38% of UC enrollees.

    A little more than quarter of college-age Californians are White, compared with 18% of UC enrollees.

    Five percent of UC enrollees are African American, which is about on par with the 5.6% of college-age Californians who are Black.

    The figures change in comparison with the system overall at UC Berkeley, the system’s flagship undergraduate campus, where a smaller portion of entrants in 2022 were categorized as African American / Black (3.6%) and Chicanx / Latinx (21.1%), and more were White (30.7%) and Asian (52.1%).

    It’s also interesting to note that the Supreme Court exempted military academies from the decision. They can, presumably, still utilize affirmative action even though they are the higher learning institutions over which the federal government has the most control. The court, according to the majority opinion, feels the academies have “potentially distinct interests.”

    Those interests were perhaps outlined by former military leaders who wrote a brief last year arguing affirmative action aided national security.

    Meanwhile, even though race is off the table as a determinative factor, schools like Harvard University can and still will very much take into account whether an applicant’s parents went there, how much their parents might be able to donate and whether an applicant can help their sports teams.

    “While the actual language of the Supreme Court will come across as very intellectualized and esoteric, as if in a classroom, in reality, how will this work?” wondered Laura Coates, CNN’s chief legal analyst, appearing on the network Thursday.

    “How will you be able to have certain color blindedness but then at the same time allowed to take into account one’s experiences when race has been a part of that? That’s the devil in the details of every affirmative action case.”

    CNN’s Nicquel Terry Ellis wrote about what the data suggests will happen:

    A study by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce found that colleges and universities are less likely to meet or exceed their current levels of racial diversity in the absence of race-conscious admissions. They are also less likely to reflect the racial makeup of the population graduating from the nation’s high schools.

    Zack Mabel, a researcher for Georgetown’s Center for Education and the Workforce, told her race-neutral practices have not driven the diversity many colleges hoped for, and some students are simply not applying. Read more from Terry Ellis.

    Creating a more equitable and representative workforce has been a public aim in corporate America, where companies have created diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, departments. Multiple corporations – from Apple to IKEA – asked the Supreme Court to allow affirmative action to continue so that their potential workforce is more diverse.

    But efforts to recruit students of color in the race-neutral, post-affirmative-action world will be complicated in states where there is a growing backlash to diversity efforts.

    CNN’s Leah Asmelash recently wrote:

    More than a dozen state legislatures have introduced or passed bills reining in DEI programs in colleges and universities, claiming the offices eat up valuable financial resources with little impact.

    “The ruling by the Court’s six Republican-appointed justices prevents higher-education institutions from considering race in admissions precisely as kids of color, for the first time, comprise a majority of the nation’s high-school graduates,” writes Ronald Brownstein, a senior editor at The Atlantic and a senior political analyst for CNN.

    He suggests the decision will “widen the mismatch between a youth population that is rapidly diversifying and a student body that is likely to remain preponderantly white in the elite colleges and universities that serve as the pipeline for leadership in the public and private sectors.”

    Rather than ease social tension, he argues, the new race-neutral requirement could actually propel it.

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  • Largest Private Scholarship Provider Responds to Landmark Decision on Affirmative Action

    Largest Private Scholarship Provider Responds to Landmark Decision on Affirmative Action

    Press Release


    Jun 30, 2023 14:59 EDT

    Scholarship America President & CEO Mike Nylund has released the following statement in response to the Supreme Court decision on affirmative action and race-conscious admissions.

    In response to the United States Supreme Court’s historic ruling curtailing race-conscious admissions decisions in higher education, Mike Nylund, president and CEO of Scholarship America, released the following statement.  

    “As colleges and universities evaluate and potentially redesign their admissions processes based on this week’s SCOTUS decision, private-sector scholarships will play a larger role in closing racial gaps in postsecondary education enrollment and completion.   

    “Research from Scholarship America and other industry leaders indicates scholarships have the biggest impact on graduation rates for Black, Indigenous, and Latino/a students with high financial need — but that today, these students are the least likely to benefit from private scholarships. In an effort to continue supporting these students in the wake of the decision, Scholarship America will continue our work to get as many scholarship dollars as we can to the students facing the most need.  

    “While the Court’s opinion did not directly address whether processes beyond admissions would be impacted by the Court’s decision, we understand that the impact of the ruling could potentially extend to prohibiting universities from considering race in awarding financial aid. As the nation’s largest provider of private scholarships, however, Scholarship America remains firmly committed to ensuring that students from all backgrounds have the ability to obtain a high-quality degree or credential.” 

    Scholarship America will continue working with our more than 1,000 partners — including over 100 companies on the Fortune 500 — to grow the role of private scholarships and create a new roadmap for directing funding to the students who need it most. To learn more, visit ScholarshipAmerica.org

    About Scholarship America 

    Scholarship America is a nonprofit organization that works to eliminate barriers to educational success so that any student can pursue their dream. Since it was founded in 1958, Scholarship America has distributed $5.1 billion to 3 million students, making it the nation’s largest private scholarship provider. Learn more at scholarshipamerica.org

    Source: Scholarship America

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  • Education Secretary Miguel Cardona: Affirmative action ruling

    Education Secretary Miguel Cardona: Affirmative action ruling

    One day after the Supreme Court ruled to strike down affirmative action in college admissions, officials from the U.S. Department of Education say they intend to provide guidance to college presidents within 45 days that will clarify the implications of the landmark ruling, which states that race cannot be a determining factor in the admission process

    The Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that race-conscious admission policies of Harvard College and the University of North Carolina violate the Constitution, bringing an end to affirmative action in higher education in a decision that will reverberate across campuses nationwide, raising concerns about access to higher education.

    “We are not living up to our ideals in this country when it comes to ensuring equal access to higher education,” U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona told “CBS Mornings.” 

    “This decision eliminates a valuable tool that universities have utilized to provide access to students from diverse backgrounds.”

    Cardona and others including President Joe Biden expressed concern over Thursday’s ruling and its long-term impact on education for underrepresented minority groups.

    The Supreme Court decision does not apply to military academies due to the “potentially distinct interests” they present. It also does not apply to legacy admission, the practice of giving preferential treatment or consideration to applicants who have family members, usually parents or grandparents, who attended the institution, which Cardona believes contributes to disparities in access within universities like Harvard.

    “If someone can just write a check and pay the tuition, that’s a factor that’s being used to allow for admission. And again, it speaks to the challenge that we’re going to have in this country when the Supreme Court is making a decision that takes away this tool from higher education institutions,” said Cardona.

    Regarding the Biden administration’s commitment to affirmative action despite a lack of positive public opinion, Cardona said it was important to address the inequities and ensure access to higher education for all students.

    He pointed to the example of when California eliminated affirmative action in 1996, resulting in a significant decrease in Black and Latino student enrollment in top-tier schools. Efforts have been made to recover from this decline, but the representation of Black and brown students in higher education institutions remains lower than before the ban.

    Cardona acknowledged the desire for equality to start earlier in the education system, expressing that the Department of Education is focused on addressing disparities and not ignoring the lack of equal access to higher education.

    “Diverse student bodies in higher education make the learning better for all students,” Cardona said.

    Dr. Ruth Simmons, the first black president of an Ivy League school and currently a President’s Distinguished Fellow at Rice University and a senior adviser to the president of Harvard University, testified in support of affirmative action during the hearings.

    She told “CBS Mornings” that an overlooked aspect of the ruling was within Chief Justice John Roberts’ statement that students should be evaluated based on their individual experiences, challenges faced, skills developed, and lessons learned. Simmons pointed out that this allows for continued consideration of a diverse range of factors, providing some hope.

    “We’re still able to consider a diversity of factors… so I am not given to seeing this as being as detrimental as many,” Simmons said.

    She advises that while the ruling may be discouraging, it should not deter students.

    “We want them to continue to concentrate on their work, work hard in their courses of course, but learn to become a total human being. Be involved in activities, be involved in doing good for your community, be involved in developing all of who you are as a human being. And admissions people will see that in addition to everything else you bring,” Simmons said.

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  • Ruth Simmons on impact of affirmative action ruling and how schools can work towards diversity

    Ruth Simmons on impact of affirmative action ruling and how schools can work towards diversity

    Ruth Simmons on impact of affirmative action ruling and how schools can work towards diversity – CBS News


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    The Supreme Court overturned decades of precedence in ruling that colleges and universities can no longer consider race as a factor in admissions decisions. Ruth Simmons was the first black president of an Ivy League university, and is now a President’s Distinguished Fellow at Rice University and a Special Adviser to the President of Harvard University. She joins CBS Mornings to discuss the impact this decision will have and how schools can continue to work towards diverse student bodies without affirmative action.

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  • Mike Pence Roasted For Extremely Weird Take On Affirmative Action

    Mike Pence Roasted For Extremely Weird Take On Affirmative Action

    “There may have been a time 50 years ago when we needed to affirmatively take steps to correct long-term racial bias in institutions of higher education,” Pence told MSNBC’s Dasha Burns. “But I can tell you, as the father of three college graduates, those days are long over.”

    Pence was reacting to the Supreme Court’s controversial decision to end affirmative action in education, a system designed to help Black and Latino students gain access to higher education and correct historic underrepresentation and discrimination against those groups.

    Pence and his wife Karen, both wealthy and influential college graduates, have three adult children: Michael Pence, Charlotte Pence Bond and Audrey Pence. They attended Purdue, DePaul and Yale universities, respectively.

    Twitter users were left scratching their heads:

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  • 6/29: CBS Evening News

    6/29: CBS Evening News

    6/29: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Supreme Court rules against affirmative action in college admissions, Yankees pitcher Domingo Germán throws perfect game

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  • Supreme Court’s affirmative action ruling leaves colleges looking for new ways to promote diversity

    Supreme Court’s affirmative action ruling leaves colleges looking for new ways to promote diversity

    WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court has sent shockwaves through higher education with a landmark decision that struck down affirmative action and left colleges across the nation searching for new ways to promote student diversity.

    Leaders of scores of universities said Thursday that they were disappointed by what they see as a blow to diversity. Yet many also voiced optimism that they would find new ways to admit more Black and Hispanic students, despite evidence that eliminating the practice often leads to steep enrollment decreases among them.

    President Joe Biden said he disagreed with the decision and asked the Education Department to explore policies that could help colleges build diverse student bodies. He also pushed against policies like legacy preferences — admissions boosts given to the children of alumni — that tend to help white, wealthy students.

    “We should never allow the country to walk away from the dream upon which it was founded,” Biden told reporters. “We need a new path forward, a path consistent with the law that protects diversity and expands opportunity.”

    Yet evidence from states that previously outlawed affirmative action show it will be a daunting challenge.

    As an alternative to affirmative action, colleges from California to Florida have tried a range of strategies to achieve the diversity they say is essential to their campuses. Many have given greater preference to low-income families. Others started admitting top students from every community in their state.

    But years of experimentation — often prompted by state-level bans on considering race in admissions — left no clear solution. In states requiring race-neutral policies, many colleges saw enrollment drops among Black and Hispanic students, especially at selective colleges that historically have been mostly white.

    At Amherst College, officials had estimated going entirely race-neutral would reduce Black, Hispanic and Indigenous populations by half.

    “We fully expect it would be a significant decrease in our population,” said Matthew McGann, Amherst’s director of admission, earlier this year.

    Facing a conservative Supreme Court that appeared skeptical from the start, colleges have been preparing for a rollback. Some were considering adding more essays to get a better picture of an applicant’s background, a strategy invited in Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling.

    “Nothing prohibits universities from considering an applicant’s discussion of how race affected the applicant’s life, so long as that discussion is concretely tied to a quality of character or unique ability that the particular applicant can contribute to the university,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the court’s conservative majority.

    Other colleges were planning to boost recruiting in racially diverse areas, or admit more transfer students from community colleges.

    The court took up affirmative action in response to challenges at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina. Lower courts upheld admission systems at both schools, rejecting claims that the schools discriminated against white and Asian American applicants. But at Supreme Court arguments in late October, all six conservative justices expressed doubts about the practice, which had been upheld under Supreme Court decisions reaching back to 1978, and as recently as 2016.

    Nine states already have banned affirmative action, starting with California in 1996 and, most recently, Idaho in 2020.

    After Michigan voters rejected it in 2006, the University of Michigan shifted attention to low-income students.

    It sent graduates to work as counselors in low-income high schools. It started offering college prep in Detroit and Grand Rapids. It offered full scholarships for low-income Michigan residents. More recently, it started accepting fewer early admission applications, which are more likely to come from white students.

    Despite those efforts, the share of Black and Hispanic undergraduates hasn’t fully rebounded from a falloff after 2006. And while Hispanic enrollments have been increasing, Black enrollments continued to slide, going from 8% of undergraduates in 2006 to 4% now.

    The campus is drawing more low-income students, but that hasn’t translated to racial diversity, said Erica Sanders, director of undergraduate admissions at Michigan.

    “Socioeconomic status is not a proxy for race,” Sanders said.

    At the same time, some of Michigan’s less selective colleges have fared better. At nearby Eastern Michigan University, the number of students of color increased, reflecting demographic shifts in the state. It illustrates what experts say is a chilling effect seen most acutely at selective colleges — students of color see fewer of their peers at places like Ann Arbor, prompting them to choose campuses that appear more welcoming.

    Growing up in Ann Arbor, there was an expectation that Odia Kaba would attend the University of Michigan. When her application was deferred, she started at Eastern Michigan with plans to transfer to Ann Arbor her sophomore year.

    By then, Kaba was getting daily texts from her sister, who attended U-M, describing the microaggressions she faced as a Black student on campus. Rooms went silent when she walked in. She was ignored in group projects. She felt alone and suffocated.

    “Why would I go to U of M?” Kaba, 22, remembers thinking. “I’m just going to be stuck with people that don’t look like me, can’t relate to me, and with no way to escape it.”

    Kaba stayed at Eastern Michigan and graduated with a degree in quantitative economics this year. Even though it’s a mostly white campus, Kaba said she found pockets of diversity that helped make her comfortable.

    “I’m in economics, which is a white male-dominated space. But I can walk out of the classroom and be surrounded by my people, and I just feel safe,” she said.

    The University of California also saw enrollment slides after a statewide ban in 1996. Within two years, Black and Hispanic enrollments fell by half at the system’s two most selective campuses, Berkeley and UCLA. The system would go on to spend more than $500 million on programs aimed at low-income and first-generation college students.

    It also started a program that promises admission to the top 9% of students in each high school across the state, an attempt to reach strong students from all backgrounds. A similar promise in Texas has been credited for expanding racial diversity, and opponents of affirmative action cite it as a successful model.

    In California, the promise drew students from a wider geographic area but did little to expand racial diversity, the system said in a brief to the Supreme Court. It had almost no impact at Berkeley and UCLA, where students compete against tens of thousands of other applicants.

    Today at UCLA and Berkeley, Hispanic students make up 20% of undergraduates, higher than in 1996 but lower than their 53% share among California’s high school graduates. Black students, meanwhile, have a smaller presence than they did in 1996, accounting for 2% of undergraduates at Berkeley.

    Opponents of affirmative action say some states have fared well without it. After Oklahoma outlawed the practice in 2012, the state’s flagship university saw “no long-term severe decline” in minority enrollments, the state’s attorney general told the Supreme Court.

    It pointed to a recent freshman class at the University of Oklahoma that had more Hispanic, Asian and Native American students than in 2012. The share of Black students fell, but it wasn’t far from flagship universities in other states that allow affirmative action, the state said.

    Still, many colleges expect racial diversity could take a hit. With affirmative action struck down, colleges fear they will unknowingly admit fewer students of color. In the long run, it can be self-perpetuating — if numbers fall, the campus can appear less attractive to future students of color.

    That’s a problem, colleges say, because racial diversity benefits the entire campus, exposing students to other worldviews and preparing them for a diverse workforce.

    Beyond race, the decision has the impact to reshape other admissions policies. To draw more underserved populations, experts say colleges may need to do away with policies that advantage white students, from legacy preferences and early admission to standardized test scores.

    ___

    The Associated Press education team receives support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • 6/29: Prime Time with John Dickerson

    6/29: Prime Time with John Dickerson

    6/29: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News


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    John Dickerson reports on the Supreme Court’s decision on affirmative action, an alleged threat near former President Barack Obama’s home, and what to expect at airports this July 4th weekend.

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  • Biden talks Supreme Court and Russia but also media and McCain in rare network interview

    Biden talks Supreme Court and Russia but also media and McCain in rare network interview

    WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden rarely gives network interviews, and when he sat down in the MSNBC studio on Thursday, it came at an especially busy time, with the Supreme Court having just overturned the use of affirmative action in college admissions and in the aftermath of a revolt in Russia.

    The nearly 20-minute conversation addressed those matters. But it also veered heavily into topics like criticism of the media and light-hearted discussion of the late Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain, who was a friend of Biden’s.

    When Donald Trump was president, he was criticized for giving interviews to sympathetic media outlets where the questions were often soft and even fawning. Biden, meanwhile, has done far fewer formal interviews than his immediate predecessors. His last network interview was in early May and also on MSNBC.

    This time, interviewer Nicolle Wallace, who was White House communications director under President George W. Bush and worked on McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign, kicked things off by noting how unusual it was for a sitting president to appear in a network studio.

    “The president of the United States is here. Really. At the table,” Wallace began, before telling Biden, “This is very exciting for us.” Biden responded, “It’s exciting for me.”

    The president said the Supreme Court had “done more to unravel basic rights and basic decisions than any court in recent history,” pointing to its decision Thursday on affirmative action and its overturning of the constitutional right to abortion last summer.

    “I just find it so out of sorts with the basic value system of the American people,” Biden said.

    He said he did not support the idea of expanding the number of Supreme Court justices, as a number of progressives have urged him to do.

    He also spoke about his reelection campaign, acknowledging, “I know the polling numbers are not good.” He noted that many polls once suggested he wouldn’t win the 2020 Democratic presidential primary or defeat Trump in that year’s general election, and they didn’t indicate that Democrats would have a stronger-than-expected showing in last year’s midterms.

    The president then spoke at length about the media, saying, “This is not a criticism of the press. It’s an observation. There’s a lot to be worried about around the world, and talking to a lot of reporters, they tell me — I’m going to be careful what I say here — a number of reporters have indicated that there’s no editors anymore, on what they do.”

    “Huh,” responded Wallace, as Biden continued that he’d been told by some reporters that they are under pressure to build their personal brands, finally concluding, “I just think there’s a lot changing.”

    Wallace asked about the Russian revolt and what the U.S. knew. Biden responded, “We knew things ahead of time,” but said he couldn’t say what. Wallace followed up, “Did you worry that Trump might have tipped him off, had he still been president?” She was apparently asking whether Trump would have warned Russian President Vladimir Putin of the mercenary leader’s plans for the rebellion against Russia’s military leaders.

    “Oh, God,” Biden said. “I don’t know. I don’t think about that very often.”

    The president spoke a bit more about Russia’s war in Ukraine. Wallace eventually referenced McCain and asked, “What do you think he would think of his Republican Party?”

    “I don’t think he’d think much of it,” Biden said, but quickly added, “I don’t know that.”

    Wallace concluded by again noting the rarity of Biden’s in-studio appearance, adding, “Consider it your chair. Consider it an open invitation. There are going to be a lot of things on people’s minds, and I hope you’ll look at this as a place where you can come and talk about anything that’s on your mind.”

    “Well, I will,” Biden said.

    MSNBC declined to comment on the interview afterward.

    Later Thursday, Biden attended New York fundraisers to collect donations for his reelection campaign. But the visit to New York, where MSNBC’s studio is located, was an official one — meaning taxpayers funded at least parts of it.

    “It’s a mixed — mixed travel trip with official and political — political portions,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard Air Force One on the way to New York.

    Asked what the official part of the trip was, Jean-Pierre responded, “You all are always criticizing the president for not doing enough interviews — right?”

    “He’s going to New York, and we took the opportunity to go in studio,” Jean-Pierre said. “It’s his first in-studio interview.”

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  • Unpacking the Supreme Court’s affirmative action decision

    Unpacking the Supreme Court’s affirmative action decision

    Unpacking the Supreme Court’s affirmative action decision – CBS News


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    The Supreme Court ended the systemic use of race as a factor in college admissions on Thursday. Jess Bravin, Supreme Court correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, joins CBS News to break down the decision. Plus, Andrew Brennen, a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill graduate who testified in the case, shares his thoughts on the outcome.

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  • Supreme Court rules against affirmative action in college admissions

    Supreme Court rules against affirmative action in college admissions

    Supreme Court rules against affirmative action in college admissions – CBS News


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    By a 6-3 margin, the Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that it is unconstitutional for universities to consider race during the student admissions process, marking a major setback for affirmative action policies that have been in place for five decades. Major Garrett reports.

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  • In Ending Affirmative Action, Clarence Thomas Finally Gets What He Wanted

    In Ending Affirmative Action, Clarence Thomas Finally Gets What He Wanted

    Chief Justice John Roberts may have written the majority opinion for the U.S. Supreme Court that ended affirmative action on Thursday, but Justice Clarence Thomas may savor the moment the most.

    Thomas, the second of only three Black Supreme Court justices in American history, is the court’s harshest opponent of affirmative action policies. Despite, or rather because of, his experience of being among the first generation of Black students to benefit from affirmative action policies, Thomas views them with the greatest disdain.

    In a solo concurring opinion involving Harvard College and the University of North Carolina, Thomas declared victory and stated his opinion that the precedent in the 2003 case of Grutter v. Bollinger, which had upheld affirmative action, was now dead ― something that Roberts did not do.

    “The Court’s opinion rightly makes clear that Grutter is, for all intents and purposes, overruled,” Thomas wrote. “And, it sees the universities’ admissions policies for what they are: rudderless, race-based preferences designed to ensure a particular racial mix in their entering classes. Those policies fly in the face of our colorblind Constitution and our Nation’s equality ideal. In short, they are plainly — and boldly — unconstitutional.”

    Thomas uses his concurrence to bring all of his past opinions to bear to dance on the grave of a policy of “racial discrimination” that he believes stamped him with the stigma of race ever since he left his home in Pin Point, Georgia.

    After attending College of the Holy Cross, Thomas chose to go to Yale Law School. The law school had just implemented an affirmative action policy that set a quota of 10% of incoming classes to be people of color. Thomas was among 12 other Black students in his class.

    He has since recounted feeling unnerved by the smiling faces of white liberals telling him that he was there due to their beneficence. He would connect this to a favorite song of his at the time, The Undisputed Truth’s “Smiling Faces Sometimes” with its lyrics:

    Smiling faces, smiling faces, sometimes

    They don’t tell the truth

    Smiling faces, smiling faces tell lies

    “As much as it had stung to be told I’d done well … despite my race, it was far worse to feel that I was now at Yale because of it,” Thomas wrote in his 2007 memoir.

    Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has been a longtime opponent of affirmative action policies.

    Alex Wong via Getty Images

    The white liberal acting out of supposed charity to the Black student was actually just enacting a sort of perverse inversion of the old racism, Thomas would later say. He would frequently equate the policies of racial segregation and affirmative action.

    “I believe that there is a ‘moral [and] constitutional equivalence’ … between laws designed to subjugate a race and those that distribute benefits on the basis of race in order to foster some current notion of equality,” Thomas wrote in a 1995 affirmative action opinion.

    He echoed this belief Thursday in his concurrence supporting the plaintiffs, Students for Fair Admissions Inc.: “Then, as now, the views that motivated Dred Scott and Plessy have not been confined to the past, and we must remain ever vigilant against all forms of racial discrimination.”

    Thomas has long written and opined that affirmative action started from a premise that Black people were “inferior” and in need of white people’s helping hand. This made white people the central character in the affirmative action narrative while making the Black recipient ― and the rest of society ― question their achievements, Thomas argued.

    “[Blacks] owe all their achievements to the ‘anointed’ in society who supposedly changed the circumstances ― not to their own efforts,” Thomas wrote in 1995 for The Weekly Standard.

    This beneficence from the “anointed” not only creates doubt and confusion for the Black recipients of affirmative action but also undermines their accomplishments to themselves, their peers and in society at large. It doesn’t matter whether a given Black person achieved thanks to affirmative action or not.

    “Who can differentiate between those who belong and those who do not?” Thomas wrote in his opinion in Grutter.

    This leaves a question mark over the accomplishments of all successful Black people and marks them with a stigma of inferiority, he reasoned.

    “The problem of stigma does not depend on determinacy as to whether those stigmatized are actually the ‘beneficiaries’ of racial discrimination,” Thomas continued in Grutter. “When blacks take positions in the highest places of government, industry, or academia, it is an open question today whether their skin color played a part in their advancement. The question itself is the stigma ― because either racial discrimination did play a role, in which case the person may be deemed ‘otherwise unqualified,’ or it did not, in which case asking the question itself unfairly marks those blacks who would succeed without discrimination.”

    “As much as it had stung to be told I’d done well … despite my race, it was far worse to feel that I was now at Yale because of it.””

    – Clarence Thomas, 2007

    This all may sound eerily familiar to liberals who have familiarized themselves with contemporary literature steeped in critical race theory, like Ibram X. Kendi’s book “Stamped From the Beginning.” That’s because Thomas agrees.

    “For Thomas, the most important form that racism takes is the stigma or mark it puts on black people, designating them as less worthy or capable than white people. … What distinguishes Thomas’s jurisprudence is that he accepts these liberal claims about the secret and no-so-secret life of race, while refusing the conclusions that liberals believe must follow from them,” the political theorist Corey Robin writes in his book “The Enigma of Clarence Thomas.”

    He rejects what liberals believe must follow ― integration, diversity goals, affirmative action, equity ― because he says they only serve the interests of white people.

    “[A]s the universities define the ‘diversity’ that they practice, it encompasses social and aesthetic goals far afield from the education-based interest discussed in Grutter,” Thomas wrote in his concurrence on Thursday.

    His opinions on affirmative action are frequently peppered with talk of “aesthetics.” By this, Thomas means that the aesthetic appearance provided by a diverse student body at exclusive educational institutions serves only the interests of the rising white elite. If diversity means admitting more Black students because they are supposed to bring diverse perspectives, then the people they are bringing those perspectives to are the non-beneficiaries of affirmative action: white people. Therefore, affirmative action for Black people is meant only to help white people obtain an aesthetic air of racial diversity.

    It also helps elite schools maintain their exclusivity. Harvard is only Harvard because it admits so few people, after all. Affirmative action provides a tool to increase racial diversity while keeping exclusive admissions policies.

    In this way, affirmative action is a “solution to the self-inflicted wounds of [an] elitist admissions policy,” Thomas wrote in Grutter.

    In his concurrence in Students for Fair Admissions, Thomas gathers these arguments and deploys them with great venom at the dissent written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the nation’s third Black justice. In her own dissent, Jackson not only outlines the history of gaps in opportunity that made affirmative action policies necessary but argues that it is a matter of respect for identity, in contrast to Thomas’ argument that affirmative action is inherently demeaning.

    “To demand that colleges ignore race in today’s admissions practices — and thus disregard the fact that racial disparities may have mattered for where some applicants find themselves today — is not only an affront to the dignity of those students for whom race matters. It also condemns our society to never escape the past that explains how and why race matters to the very concept of who ‘merits’ admission,” she writes.

    “[Thomas’ opinion] demonstrates an obsession with race consciousness that far outstrips my or UNC’s holistic understanding that race can be a factor that affects applicants’ unique life experiences,” Jackson continued in a footnote, before concluding: “[B]y insisting that obvious truths be ignored, [Thomas] prevent[s] our problem-solving institutions from directly addressing the real import and impact of ‘social racism’ and ‘government-imposed racism,’ thereby deterring our collective progression toward becoming a society where race no longer matters.”

    Thomas, in turn, accuses Jackson of arguing that all outcomes are determined by race and the country’s history of racism. In envisioning this “black and white world (literally),” Thomas says that Jackson would hand over policy to a self-appointed elite class to use race to sort out the winners and losers.

    Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sparred with Thomas in their dueling dissent and concurrence in the Students for Fair Admissions cases.
    Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sparred with Thomas in their dueling dissent and concurrence in the Students for Fair Admissions cases.

    OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty Images

    “Her dissent is not a vanguard of the innocent and helpless,” Thomas writes. “It is instead a call to empower privileged elites, who will ‘tell us [what] is required to level the playing field’ among castes and classifications that they alone can divine.”

    Though they do not say so, Jackson and Thomas may simply not believe in the same end point. Thomas argued in his concurrence and in the past that affirmative action policies hurt Black people by admitting them to schools that are a “mismatch.”

    “[T]hose policies sort at least some blacks and Hispanics into environments where they are less likely to succeed academically relative to their peers,” Thomas wrote in his concurrence on Thursday, adding, “These policies may harm even those who succeed academically.”

    Instead, Thomas believes that Black students should go to schools where they would not be “stamped” with the “stigma” of affirmative action and would find a match to help them succeed. What would that match be? Historically Black colleges and universities “demonstrate a marked ability to improve the lives of their students,” Thomas wrote in his concurrence.

    “Why, then, would this Court need to allow other universities to racially discriminate?” Thomas asks. “Not for the betterment of those black students, it would seem. The hard work of HBCUs and their students demonstrate that ‘black schools can function as the center and symbol of black communities, and provide examples of independent black leadership, success, and achievement.’”

    In his opinions and public comments, Thomas has long talked up the ills of integration and the promise of separation. “The whole push to assimilate simply does not make sense to me,” Thomas once said.

    “I am the only one at this table who attended a segregated school,” The New Yorker’s Jeffrey Rosen reported Thomas to have said during deliberations on a desegregation case in 1995. “And the problem with segregation was not that we didn’t have white people in our class. The problem was that we didn’t have equal facilities.”

    And instead, Thomas felt that affirmative action simply exposed him to social experimentation by white liberals.

    “I have been the guinea pig for many social experiments on social minorities. To all who would continue these experiments, I say, ‘Please, no more,’” Thomas said in a 1986 speech.

    As Robin writes in his biography of the justice, Thomas never left behind his Black radical politics of the 1970s. He has instead transmuted them into a deeply pessimistic conservative politics of race. White racism can never be overcome. Efforts to ameliorate historic racial inequalities are actually a new form of white racism and control. Integration is detrimental to Black people. Separation is the ideal.

    Jackson, now representing an alternate view from the bench as a Black woman, takes a different view in her dissent when she says that affirmative action programs “reflect universities’ clear-eyed optimism that, one day, race will no longer matter.”

    Thomas has now achieved one of his great career goals. It remains to be seen whether his vision for the future comes to pass.

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  • Democrats discuss Supreme Court reform after affirmative action ruling

    Democrats discuss Supreme Court reform after affirmative action ruling

    Democrats discuss Supreme Court reform after affirmative action ruling – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Many Democrats quickly criticized Thursday’s affirmative action decision, including President Biden and Vice President Harris. Massachusetts Democratic Congresswoman and House Minority Whip Katherine Clark joins “America Decides” to discuss the Supreme Court ruling and how her party is planning to respond.

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  • Ketanji Brown Jackson Torches Clarence Thomas for Bulls–t Take on Affirmative Action

    Ketanji Brown Jackson Torches Clarence Thomas for Bulls–t Take on Affirmative Action

    As the Times notes, “Prosecutors often continue investigating strands of a criminal case after charges have been brought, and sometimes their efforts go nowhere. But post-indictment investigations can result in additional charges against people who have already been accused of crimes in the case.”

    A spokesman for Trump declined the Times’ request comment.

    It definitely must have just been a happy coincidence that a wealthy Ron DeSantis donor who reportedly lent the Florida governor his private plane on at least 12 occasions received $92 million from the DeSantis administration for his real estate project, right?

    Right?? Per The Washington Post:

    The administration of Florida governor Ron DeSantis steered $92 million last year in leftover federal coronavirus stimulus money to a controversial highway interchange project that directly benefits a top political donor, according to state records. The decision by the Florida Department of Transportation to use money from the 2021 American Rescue Plan for the I-95 interchange at Pioneer Trail Road near Daytona Beach fulfilled a yearslong effort by Mori Hosseini, a politically connected housing developer who owns two large tracts of largely forested land abutting the planned interchange. The funding through the DeSantis administration, approved shortly after the governor’s reelection, expedited the project by more than a decade, according to state documents.

    Hosseini plans to develop the land—which includes a sensitive watershed once targeted for conservation by the state—into approximately 1,300 dwelling units and 650,000 square feet of nonresidential use, including an outdoor village shopping district. He has called the Woodhaven development, which has already begun construction, his “best project yet” and promised to pull out all the stops for its success. “With or without the interchange, we would have built Woodhaven there, but it certainly helps,” he told The Daytona Beach News Journal in March 2019.

    Before the Post story was published, a spokesman for DeSantis posted the outlet’s request for comment on Twitter, later writing in an email to the newspaper, “You are trying to make an accusation to play ‘gotcha’,” in response to a question about whether DeSantis had discussed the project with Hosseini or advocating for funding it.

    Elsewhere!

    Supreme Court decision a “travesty of justice” says UNC, Harvard litigator

    The Hill • Read More

    Court has “gone out of its way” to unravel basic rights, Biden says

    NBC News • Read More

    The End of Affirmative Action Is Only the Beginning

    Intelligencer • Read More

    Judge rejects Trump’s “presidential immunity” defense in second E. Jean Carroll case

    Politico • Read More

    Consumers and retailers brace for student loans payment restart

    Washington Post • Read More

    Prosecutors charge three men with insider trading scheme related to Trump’s media company

    Politico • Read More

    Trump, Who Has the Mind of a Child, Still Thinks the Classified Documents He Got Indicted for Keeping Belong to Him: Report

    Vanity Fair • Read More

    Italian teacher sacked for 20 years of absence vows to defend herself

    BBC • Read More

    Bess Levin

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  • The Supreme Court Sets Fire to Affirmative Action. John Roberts Won’t Own Up to It

    The Supreme Court Sets Fire to Affirmative Action. John Roberts Won’t Own Up to It

    In Grutter v. Bollinger, a landmark 2003 case that reaffirmed the validity of affirmative action in college admissions, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor infamously put an expiration date on her own opinion—that is, on how long the limited use of race in the college-admissions process would be permissible under the law. “We expect that 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today,” she wrote.

    The nation is still a few years away from that deadline, and that quarter-century mark may have well been aspirational, if not illusory, as racism and structural inequalities, which undergird who does and who doesn’t get to go to college, are not artifacts of the past. Even so, Chief Justice John Roberts on Thursday achieved by judicial fiat a long sought-after goal of Republicans and social conservatives: a declaration that affirmative action policies as the US has known them for roughly a half century are forbidden by the Constitution’s guarantee of equality under the law—the very equal protection clause that took the Civil War to write into the law.

    But a reader attempting to digest Roberts’s ruling in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College and Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina, a pair of long-running challenges to the admissions policies at Harvard and UNC, would be hard-pressed to find a single word in Roberts’s 40-page opinion acknowledging that he’s overruling precedents that have been with us since 1978. That year, in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, the Supreme Court permitted the limited use of race for the purpose of achieving a diverse student body on campus—which the justices agreed was a compelling government interest that complied with the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.

    The goal of achieving diversity, widespread in corporate America and deemed a national-security imperative in the military, has been in the crosshairs of conservative legal activism as far back as the Reagan years. But the Supreme Court has reaffirmed it time and again. Roberts, joined by all five of his conservative colleagues—Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett—doesn’t purport to discard it. He pretends to apply it in concluding that both Harvard and UNC cannot achieve diversity through their holistic reviews. As he sees it, “the Harvard and UNC admissions programs cannot be reconciled with the guarantees of the Equal Protection Clause.”

    He adds: “Both programs lack sufficiently focused and measurable objectives warranting the use of race, unavoidably employ race in a negative manner, involve racial stereotyping, and lack meaningful end points. We have never permitted admissions programs to work in that way, and we will not do so today.” (Disclosure: I edit a journal at an institute affiliated with Harvard Law School.)

    Roberts stops short of declaring that the Constitution is, in fact, a color-blind document—one that must not, under any circumstances, take into account race, let alone the reality that race has been a driving force of much of American life and law since the country’s founding. But his majority opinion teems with his enduring belief that any and all consideration of race, no matter how circumscribed, is beyond the pale under the law. Deep down, he must know that he’s altering the status quo—much like the five justices to his right altered it when ending the constitutional right to abortion last year. The rules are different now, since Roberts notes that “nothing in this opinion should be construed as prohibiting universities from considering an applicant’s discussion of how race affected his or her life, be it through discrimination, inspiration, or otherwise.”

    Roberts, in other words, puts it on students to discuss racial barriers they may face—and limits universities in what they may do with that information.

    Justice Sonia Sotomayor, a proud child of affirmative action, authored the lead dissenting rebuttal to Roberts, and she saw right through this artifice. “It is a disturbing feature of today’s decision that the Court does not even attempt to make the extraordinary showing required by stare decisis,” she writes in a dissent that is rich in the history of the 14th Amendment. “The Court simply moves the goalposts, upsetting settled expectations and throwing admissions programs nationwide into turmoil.”

    Even Thomas, who has long despised the affirmative action programs that gave him a leg up, notes that Roberts “rightly makes clear that Grutter,” which O’Connor authored 20 years ago, “is, for all intents and purposes, overruled.” Roberts never owns up to this. But Sotomayor doesn’t let him slide. She invokes the Dobbs ruling to suggest that, once again, the Supreme Court is charging ahead because its composition has changed. “At bottom, the six unelected members of today’s majority upend the status quo based on their policy preferences about what race in America should be like, but is not, and their preferences for a veneer of colorblindness in a society where race has always mattered and continues to matter in fact and in law,” Sotomayor writes. She is also quite candid that the “three Justices of color on this Court” are where they are thanks to affirmative action.

    She ends her dissent with a warning that the Supreme Court can’t put the genie back in the bottle. “Diversity is now a fundamental American value,” she writes, “housed in our varied and multicultural American community that only continues to grow. The pursuit of racial diversity will go on. Although the Court has stripped out almost all uses of race in college admissions, universities can and should continue to use all available tools to meet society’s needs for diversity in education. “

    Cristian Farias

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  • Justices Clarence Thomas and Ketanji Brown Jackson criticize each other in unusually sharp language in affirmative action case | CNN Politics

    Justices Clarence Thomas and Ketanji Brown Jackson criticize each other in unusually sharp language in affirmative action case | CNN Politics


    Washington
    CNN
     — 

    The Supreme Court’s landmark ruling Thursday on affirmative action pitted its two Black justices against each other, with the ideologically opposed jurists employing unusually sharp language attacking each other by name.

    The majority opinion authored by Chief Justice John Roberts said colleges and universities can no longer take race into consideration as a specific basis for granting admission, saying programs at Harvard and the University of North Carolina violated the Equal Protection Clause because they failed to offer “measurable” objectives to justify the use of race.

    Justice Clarence Thomas and the court’s other four conservatives joined Roberts’ opinion. But Thomas, who in 1991 became the second Black person to ascend to the nation’s highest court, issued a lengthy concurrence that attacked such admissions programs and tore into arguments posited by liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman to join the court, who penned her own fiery dissent in the case.

    Thomas has previously acknowledged that he made it to Yale Law School because of affirmative action, but he has long criticized such policies. He spoke in personal terms in his concurrence as he put forth his argument against the use of the policies, which he described as “rudderless, race-based preferences designed to ensure a particular racial mix in their entering classes.”

    “Even in the segregated South where I grew up, individuals were not the sum of their skin color,” Thomas wrote.

    “While I am painfully aware of the social and economic ravages which have befallen my race and all who suffer discrimination,” he added, “I hold out enduring hope that this country will live up to its principles so clearly enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States: that all men are created equal, are equal citizens, and must be treated equally before the law.”

    As he read his concurrence from the bench on Thursday, Jackson, who joined the court last year, stared blankly ahead. Though Justice Sonia Sotomayor read her dissent from the bench, Jackson did not read her own dissent, in which she went after Thomas’ concurrence and accused the majority of having a “let-them-eat-cake obliviousness” in how the ruling announced “‘colorblindness for all’ by legal fiat.”

    A footnote near the end of Jackson’s dissent went after the concurrence by Thomas, with the liberal justice accusing her colleague of demonstrating “an obsession with race consciousness that far outstrips my or UNC’s holistic understanding that race can be a factor that affects applicants’ unique life experiences.”

    “Justice Thomas ignites too many more straw men to list, or fully extinguish, here,” Jackson wrote. “The takeaway is that those who demand that no one think about race (a classic pink-elephant paradox) refuse to see, much less solve for, the elephant in the room – the race-linked disparities that continue to impede achievement of our great Nation’s full potential.”

    In her broader dissent, Jackson said that the argument made by the challengers that affirmative action programs are unfair “blinks both history and reality in ways too numerous to count.”

    “But the response is simple: Our country has never been colorblind,” Jackson said.

    (While Jackson recused herself from the Harvard case, she did hear the UNC case, and her dissent was focused on the latter.)

    Thomas then explicitly attacks Jackson’s opinion.

    “As she sees things, we are all inexorably trapped in a fundamentally racist society, with the original sin of slavery and the historical subjugation of black Americans still determining our lives today,” Thomas wrote.

    “Worse still, Justice Jackson uses her broad observations about statistical relationships between race and select measures of health, wealth, and well-being to label all blacks as victims,” Thomas wrote at another point in his concurrence. “Her desire to do so is unfathomable to me.”

    ‘You don’t have to be perfect’: Watch Judge Jackson’s emotional message to her girls

    Thomas, one of the court’s most conservative members, has long been known for his distaste for affirmative action policies. He has been open about the fact that he made it to Yale because of affirmative action, but says the stigma of preferential treatment made it difficult for him to find a job after college.

    In his memoir, “My Grandfather’s Son,” Thomas says he felt “tricked” by paternalistic Whites at Yale who recruited Black students.

    “After graduating from Yale, I met a black alumnus of the University of Michigan Law School who told me that he’d made a point of not mentioning his race on his application. I wished with all my heart that I’d done the same,” he wrote.

    “I learned the hard way that a law degree from Yale meant one thing for White graduates and another for blacks, no matter how much anyone denied it,” Thomas wrote. “As a symbol of my disillusionment, I peeled a fifteen-cent price sticker off a package of cigars and stuck it one the frame of my law degree to remind myself of the mistake I’d made by going to Yale.”

    He dissented in the 2003 case Grutter v. Bollinger, which allowed for the limited use of race in college admissions.

    “I believe blacks can achieve in every avenue of American life without the meddling of university administrators,” he wrote in his dissent.

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  • U law expert available to comment on Supreme Court decision on affirmative action

    U law expert available to comment on Supreme Court decision on affirmative action

    In a widely anticipated decision, the Supreme Court on Thursday issued a decision finding that race-conscious admissions policies were unconstitutional. Students for Fair Admissions filed the original case against Harvard and the University of North Carolina. The decision, however, has far wider repercussions for higher education institutions. Erika George, a law professor at the S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah, is available to comment on the decision and its implications.

    University of Utah

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  • Opinion: Affirmative Action Is In Danger, Again

    Opinion: Affirmative Action Is In Danger, Again

    Barbara Grutter, a white lady from Michigan, filed suit when she was rejected by the University of Michigan Law School, which admitted that it took steps to ensure a racially diverse student body. In Grutter v. Bollinger, a landmark case on affirmative action that caught national attention in 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court determined the law school’s admissions policies were not unconstitutional.

    However, the companion case, Gratz v. Bollinger, saw a different ruling: The Supreme Court deemed Michigan’s undergraduate affirmative action process — in which an automatic 20 extra points were given to Blacks, Latinos and Native Americans on a 150-point admission scale — unconstitutional.

    I was in my senior year at Michigan in 2003, and I remember all the eyes on us. As I was wrapping up an enriching and life-changing scholastic career at the university, I’d hoped against hope that the high court — and the rest of the world — saw the value in having more people who looked like me matriculate at such a prestigious university.

    Two decades later, we’re back at it as bored septuagenarian Edward Blum continues his tireless crusade toward keeping universities as white as possible with not one but two lawsuits by his nonprofit Students for Fair Admissions against the University of North Carolina and Harvard University.

    Perhaps the most visible and vocal plaintiff in these cases is Jon Wang, a Chinese American teenager who believes he was rejected by Harvard and five other top universities despite stellar grades and a 1590 SAT score because of affirmative action.

    However, one of those six schools, the University of California, Berkeley, cannot employ race-based affirmative action in its admissions policies, making Wang one of the many qualified applicants who simply didn’t get in.

    Considering we have the most conservative Supreme Court in generations, no one is optimistic about the future of affirmative action as a means of diversifying American universities. Justice Clarence Thomas, who has been engaged in a personal battle against affirmative action despite benefiting from it as a highly successful Black man born in the 1940s South, will almost certainly disappoint the ancestors (once again) by voting against it later this month.

    My personal experiences may seem inconsequential in the grand scheme of the affirmative action discussion, but, while whole books have been written about affirmative action in scope, not enough ink has been spilled about what diversity, or lack of it, feels like.

    The University of Michigan had a roughly 6% Black student population when I started attending in 1999. At a bit under 50,000 students, that’s roughly 3,000 Black folks — less than the population of my entire high school.

    We kept things tight — there was never more than a degree of separation between any Black student — because culture dictated that we do so. Our parties were policed harder than others’ and we leaned hard on each other, as well as the university’s Black support staff, to make it to caps and gowns at one of the most challenging state universities in the country.

    We had our Black homecomings, our Black graduation ceremonies, a Black Student Union and even “Black dorms” (word to Markley Hall in the mid-1990s). I’m a core member of a Black male support group that exists to this day; I remain connected to current students after 20 years away.

    I couldn’t give you exact numbers, but most of the Black folks with whom I attended Michigan are unqualified winners in life. Even in my immediate crew of close Black male friends, I’m the only liberal arts chump among engineers and a medical doctor.

    There’s a good chance a lot of us wouldn’t have even made it to Michigan without affirmative action.

    My high school GPA wasn’t mind-blowing. But my ACT score was decent, I wrote a damn good essay for my application and I attended a selective enrollment Detroit public school with a 90-plus-percent Black student population that fed to the University of Michigan — at some other school with the same grades, I might not have been accepted.

    Considering it’s a state institution a half-hour drive from Detroit, one of the Blackest major U.S. cities, Michigan recognized the importance of race-based admissions policies. But Gratz v. Bollinger made things harder for us: Michigan had only 4% Black enrollment in 2021 — a one-third drop from my time there.

    When I visit the campus today, I can feel the change: The spaces we carved out for ourselves have been either transformed or no longer exist. Testimonies from Black students from the last 15 years suggest that the university is simply … whiter.

    Richard Sander and Stuart Taylor Jr. argue in their piece “The Painful Truth About Affirmative Action” for The Atlantic that lower-performing minority students placed in high-performing environments are set up for failure, but I disagree: Michigan didn’t accept the scrubs skipping school four times a week to kick it at McDonald’s just because they were Black. The 20 points it added were for students who took care of business in high school … the valedictorians and folks active in extracurriculars.

    Some beneficiaries of affirmative action did flame out of Michigan, but so did many of the white students who made it in — depending on your major, the university can be brutally difficult, and the work requires discipline regardless of how you got admitted.

    Few opponents of affirmative action account for the positive effects a diverse student body has on everyone: Nothing bad will come of exposing students and staff to multiculturality on a collegiate level. To that end, the abolition of affirmative action in schools could also have a detrimental effect on the job market as it pertains to corporate diversity programs and the fact that businesses could again suffer the consequences of having C-suites that resemble a frat from “Animal House.”

    Harvard has admitted that there’s no more efficient means of diversifying its student population than affirmative action policies; if the Supreme Court ruling goes badly, hopefully, universities can get creative and backdoor their ways into affirmative action.

    Black matriculation and graduation from four-year universities remain frustratingly lower than for any other ethnicity, and data suggests that white women (who tend to push back against affirmative action) have historically been affirmative action’s biggest beneficiary.

    The sad irony is that many right-wing Black folks and other underrepresented minorities love to suggest that racism is all gone because … hey, they worked really hard and became winners without handouts! A very notable exception is Colin Powell, who became the first Black secretary of state following a storied military career that began in a U.S. Army that had just been desegregated.

    Powell was a Republican, and he wasn’t exactly loud on behalf of Black folks, but even he recognized the value of affirmative action.

    I’ve always empathized with the classic affirmative action counterpoint: the idea that a white male can work hard his entire life to get accepted to a prestigious school, only to “lose” his spot to an underrepresented minority whose grades weren’t as good as his.

    However, as is the case with Wang, one cannot prove that affirmative action is the explicit reason they aren’t accepted to one or several schools that weigh several factors to determine who gets in. Sometimes, you just get a bad break, and it’s easier to point the finger at Black and brown folks.

    Also, to understand socioeconomic and ethnic disadvantages is to realize why two candidates with different ethnicities and high school scores might be more comparable than what we see on paper. Since I’m sure Black Americans will be given the runaround for reparations until our great-grandkids are pushing daisies, I’ll take whatever academic bonuses we can get — especially when applied to someone who will do them justice.

    If you don’t view this as a greater social good, then chances are you feel like your “spot” in society is in danger. Or perhaps you’re simply a delusional “I get mine out the mud” ethnic minority.

    If you fit in either category, I encourage you to read a book or three.

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  • A new partisan era of American education | CNN Politics

    A new partisan era of American education | CNN Politics

    A version of this story appears in CNN’s What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here.



    CNN
     — 

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says he’s protecting kids from indoctrination and political agendas, but the zeal with which he has pushed expansive efforts to remake the Florida education system also represents an effort to influence young minds.

    However you view DeSantis’ motivations, he is getting results.

    The College Board, the nonprofit organization that oversees the Advanced Placement program offered across high schools, said it would change a new AP African American studies course that DeSantis said violated a state law to restrict certain lessons about race in schools.

    His state’s Department of Education complained the college-level course mentioned Black queer theory and the idea of intersectionality. Read more about why Florida rejected the course.

    “Governor DeSantis, are you really trying to lead us into an era akin to communism that provides censorship of free thoughts?” the civil rights lawyer Ben Crump said at a press conference on Wednesday in Florida, where he announced he would sue DeSantis on behalf of three high school students if DeSantis would not negotiate with the College Board about the AP course.

    DeSantis recently demanded a list of names of staff and programs related to diversity at public colleges and universities, part of a crackdown on “trendy ideology.”

    Separately, he wants details on students who sought gender dysphoria treatment at state universities.

    DeSantis also wants to remake the New College of Florida, a small, public liberal arts school, as a sort of “Hillsdale of the South,” according to Florida Education Commissioner Manny Diaz.

    Hillsdale, as USA Today points out, is a private, conservative Christian college in Michigan.

    A new DeSantis appointee to the New College of Florida board of trustees has clashed with board officials over his request to open every meeting with a prayer.

    Republicans across the country are focused on education. They want to guard against anything perceived as pushing equity rather than merit.

    Virginia’s governor sees a conspiracy in how school districts recognize distinction in a scholarship program based on scores on the PSAT.

    The state attorney general has launched a discrimination investigation into whether the Fairfax County Public Schools system – including Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, a nationally recognized Virginia magnet school – discriminated against students by not informing them of recognition under the National Merit Scholarship program.

    The students qualified for recognition but did not advance in the competition for a scholarship.

    Virginia Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, according to CNN’s report, claimed these revelations were a result of the “maniacal focus on equal outcomes for all students at all costs.”

    “The failure of numerous Fairfax County schools to inform students of their national merit awards could serve as a Virginia human rights violation,” the governor’s office said in a previous statement provided to CNN.

    Fairfax County Public Schools superintendent Michelle Reid told CNN the recognitions should have come earlier, but cited a lack of a “division-wide protocol” rather than any kind of mania about equity. Read more about the controversy.

    Texas officials also have their eyes on the state’s colleges and universities, according to CNN’s Eric Bradner.

    “Our public professors are accountable to the taxpayer because you pay their salary,” said Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in an inauguration speech. Bradner notes Patrick has pushed to end tenure at Texas public colleges and universities.

    “I don’t want teachers in our colleges saying, ‘America is evil and capitalism is bad and socialism is better,’” he said. “And if that means some of those professors that want to teach that don’t come to Texas, I’m OK with that.” Read Bradner’s full report.

    Meanwhile, in South Dakota, lawmakers are looking to develop a social studies curriculum based on “American exceptionalism,” propelled by the governor’s desire to put more patriotism in the classroom.

    The focus by Republican politicians on issues of race in colleges and the classroom is mirrored by the potential for a court-mandated turnaround in how American students are viewed for admissions.

    The Supreme Court heard arguments in October in two separate cases regarding affirmative action and seems poised to say colleges and universities cannot consider race in admissions.

    Nine states have already outlawed affirmative action for public universities. Voters in California were the first to do so, and the end result was falling enrollment, in particular among Black students at top public schools in the University of California system and at the University of Michigan. Those states both encouraged the Supreme Court not to outlaw affirmative action.

    Florida, which also ended the practice, encouraged the court to throw affirmative action out.


    Education was a major focus for Republicans in the recent election. While it clearly worked for DeSantis in Florida and a year earlier for Youngkin in Virginia, the mixed results for Republicans writ large may call the strategy into question as the 2024 election looms.

    I read on the education news website Chalkbeat about a new study that predicts more politics in the classroom as Americans increasingly sort themselves by political ideology.

    In the working paper, David Houston, an education policy professor at George Mason University, argues that previous debates over desegregation, prayer and sex education in public schools were divisive but not inherently partisan.

    He points to the moderate positions of previous presidents as proof. Then-President George W. Bush worked with then-Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy on education reform in 2001. Former President Barack Obama was praised by Republicans in 2012 for his work on education.

    Those stories feel like they’re from a different universe when today’s Republican governors are looking to root out liberal extremism in schools.

    Houston argues in his study, which is based on survey data, that the US may be on the cusp of a new and divisive era with “heightened partisan animosity across all aspects of education politics.”

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  • Justice Jackson’s Crucial Argument About Affirmative Action

    Justice Jackson’s Crucial Argument About Affirmative Action

    Yesterday, an hour and a half into the marathon hearings about whether colleges can use race as a factor in admissions decisions, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson began to rub her temples as she looked down at her notes.

    “We’re entertaining a rule where some people can say what they want about who they are and have that valued in a system,” she said. “And I’m worried that that creates an inequity in the system with respect to being able to express our identity.” Black and Latino applicants would be limited if they can’t express their race in the selection process, she said. She almost laughed with exasperation. “Is that a crazy worry or is that something I should be thinking about and concerned about?”

    In previous arguments this term, Jackson was a forceful voice on issues of racial discrimination and the intent of the constitutional amendments designed to protect against it. For many in favor of race-conscious admissions, she has been a welcome presence on the Court, asking, in a way, the question at the center of the cases: Have less than 50 years of affirmative action put enough of a dent in the inequality fostered over more than two centuries of racial discrimination in higher education to merit eliminating the practice?

    For roughly five hours, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in cases of Students for Fair Admissions, a coalition of unnamed Asian American students brought together by the conservative legal strategist Edward Blum, against the University of North Carolina and Harvard. If the cases are successful and the justices side with SFFA—which a majority of the justices seemed quite open to in their questioning yesterday—the decision would overturn the precedent established in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke in 1978, which has been upheld for more than 40 years. Because of her previous tenure on Harvard’s Board of Overseers, Jackson recused herself from the Harvard case and sat for only the UNC case. But she did not waste the time she had.

    Although relatively few colleges are selective enough to have reason to consider race in admitting students, there is significant evidence about what happens at those schools when such programs go away. Michigan and California, for example, saw precipitous declines in Black enrollment at their flagship campuses after those states banned the practice. (By SFFA’s own estimates, described during oral argument, Black enrollment at Harvard would fall from 14 to 10 percent without affirmative action.) In some ways, that’s the backdrop to Jackson’s questions. She was driving toward a fundamental statement about what the programs are for: Race-conscious admissions are designed to help students get into college, not to exclude students as a result of their existence.

    Jackson’s point is well worn. In 1978, during the oral arguments in the Bakke case, Justice Thurgood Marshall identified it. In an exchange where he prodded Reynold Colvin, who argued for the plaintiff, Allan Bakke, Marshall pointed out, “You’re arguing about keeping somebody out and the other side is arguing about getting somebody in.” Colvin agreed. “So, it depends on which way you look at it, doesn’t it?”

    Once again, Colvin agreed. “It depends on which way you look at the problem,” Colvin said.

    Marshall’s voice changed. “It does?” he said, with a rise in inflection.

    “The problem—” Colvin began to say before Marshall cut him off.

    “It does?” Marshall said, frustrating Colvin. “You’re talking about your client’s rights; don’t these underprivileged people have rights too?”

    Yesterday, Jackson was less direct, but no less potent, in an exchange with Patrick Strawbridge, the lawyer for SFFA. She offered a hypothetical to emphasize her point. There are two applicants who would like their family backgrounds recognized. One writes that their family has been in North Carolina since before the Civil War, and that if they were admitted to the university, they would be a fifth-generation student there. The other student is also a North Carolinian whose family has been in the state since before the Civil War—but their ancestors were enslaved and, because of years of systemic discrimination, were not allowed to attend the university. But now that they have the opportunity, they would like to attend. “As I understand your no-race-conscious-admissions rule, these two applicants would have a dramatically different opportunity to tell their family stories and to have them count.” Both applicants were qualified, Jackson offered, but the first applicant’s qualifications could be recognized in the process, whereas “the second one wouldn’t be able to [get credit for those qualifications] because his story is in many ways bound up with his race and the race of his ancestors.”

    Strawbridge thought for a moment, then offered that UNC does not have to give a legacy benefit to the first applicant if it doesn’t want to. This is true, but it was not Jackson’s point: “No, but you said it was okay if they gave a legacy benefit.” Race, she said, would be the only thing that couldn’t be considered under that program. And that would disadvantage the Black student who, in a similar set of circumstances, wants “the fact that he has been in North Carolina for generations through his family” considered.

    In a day filled with questions about the meaning of “true diversity” or the educational benefits of diversity, Jackson’s questions cut through the muck. Some students had historically been denied access to some of the nation’s most well-resourced institutions of higher education—feeder campuses for prominent roles throughout society–because of their race. If SFFA wins, that fact will be one of the only things a university cannot consider in its admissions process, as though that history never happened—as though the system is fair enough already.

    Adam Harris

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