Harvard and UNC race cases present test for U.S. Supreme Court
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[October 31, 2022]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court is set
to consider whether colleges may continue to use race as a factor in
student admissions in two cases that give its conservative majority a
chance to ban policies often employed to boost Black and Hispanic
enrollment and perhaps overturn its own precedents allowing such
practices.
The justices, confronting another contentious issue in U.S. American
society, are scheduled to hear arguments on Monday in appeals by a group
backed by a conservative activist of lower court rulings upholding
affirmative action admissions policies at Harvard University and the
University of North Carolina.
Many U.S. colleges and universities place a premium on achieving a
diverse student population not simply to remedy racial inequity and
exclusion in American life but to bring a range of perspectives onto
campuses with the goal of a richer educational experience for everyone.
Critics argue that these policies themselves amount to unlawful racial
discrimination.
According to Harvard, around 40% of U.S. colleges and universities
consider race in some fashion in admissions.
The Supreme Court has been upheld such policies, most recently in a 2016
ruling involving a white woman who sued after the University of Texas
rejected her. The court has shifted rightward since then. Its 6-3
conservative majority includes three justices who dissented in that 2016
decision and three appointed by Republican former President Donald
Trump.
The Harvard and UNC lawsuits were filed in 2014 by a group called
Students for Fair Admissions founded by anti-affirmative action activist
Edward Blum, who also backed the University of Texas plaintiff. Blum
said he is not taking a ruling against the schools for granted, adding,
"Trying to foretell what the court is going to do is a fool's errand."
Ruling in favor of the plaintiffs could require the court to overturn
its 2016 ruling and earlier decisions.
The court in 1978 ruled in a case called Regents of the University of
California v. Bakke that race could be considered as one of several
admissions factors including academic and extracurricular criteria but
barred racial quotas. It reaffirmed that in a 2003 ruling in a case
called Grutter v. Bollinger.
The court's conservative bloc has shown a willingness to abandon
precedent, as illustrated in the June decision to overturn the 1973 Roe
v. Wade ruling that had legalized abortion nationwide.
'DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION'
The lawsuits accused UNC of discriminating against white and Asian
American applicants and Harvard of discriminating against Asian American
applicants.
"These challenges are a part of a broader attack on the importance and
value that the Constitution and that American society place on diversity
and inclusion in the core institutions of our society," said Sarah
Hinger, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which has
filed briefs in the cases supporting the schools.
Democratic President Joe Biden's administration is backing the schools.
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Mugs bearing the school's logo are
displayed for sale outside Harvard University in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, U.S., June 18, 2018. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
Students for Fair Admissions cited Harvard data showing that Asian
American applicants were less likely to gain admission than white,
Black or Hispanic applicants with similar qualifications. It said
UNC's admissions data showed "stark" racial disparities in
acceptance rates among similarly qualified applicants, with Black
and Hispanic students preferred over white and Asian American ones.
Blum's group has argued that Harvard's policies ran afoul of Title
VI of the Civil Rights Act, which bars racial discrimination under
any program receiving federal financial assistance, and that UNC's
violated the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment's guarantee of equal
protection under the law.
The lower courts disagreed. For instance, the Boston-based 1st U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals found that Harvard's use of race was
"meaningful" and not "impermissibly extensive" because it prevented
diversity from plummeting.
Chief Justice John Roberts is seen as the conservative justice least
inclined to overturn precedent. But he dissented in the 2016 ruling
alongside fellow conservative Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel
Alito.
Thomas, one of the court's two Black justices, has been outspoken
against racial preferences.
"The Constitution abhors classifications based on race, not only
because those classifications can harm favored races or are based on
illegitimate motives, but also because every time the government
places citizens on racial registers and makes race relevant to the
provision of burdens or benefits, it demeans us all," Thomas wrote
in a Grutter v. Bollinger ruling dissent.
Michaele Turnage Young, a lawyer with the NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, which has filed briefs supporting the schools,
said the court could rule more narrowly than its 6-3 ideological
split might suggest, particularly after the political backlash from
the abortion ruling.
"The court might be wary of overturning another longstanding federal
line of precedent," she said.
David Bernstein, a professor at George Mason University's law school
who has filed a brief supporting Blum's group, said he would be
watching to see if the three liberal justices can find "some escape
hatch or limit" to allow some form of racial preferences to remain.
Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the court's other Black
member, has recused herself from the Harvard case but is set to
participate in the UNC one. Jackson, the newest justice, attended
Harvard and previously served on its Board of Overseers.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Will Dunham)
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