US Supreme Court is asked to stop West Point from considering race in
admissions
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[January 27, 2024]
By John Kruzel and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group opposed to affirmative action on Friday
asked the Supreme Court to block the U.S. Military Academy at West Point
from considering race as a factor in admissions decisions while a
dispute over the practice proceeds in a lower court.
The request came from Students for Fair Admissions, the group behind a
successful Supreme Court challenge to race-conscious collegiate
admissions policies in cases involving Harvard University and the
University of North Carolina.
West Point is a prestigious military service academy in New York state
that educates cadets for commissioning into the U.S. Army. Students for
Fair Admissions said that West Point's application deadline for the
class of 2028 is Jan. 31, and asked the Supreme Court to decide the
request for an injunction by that time.
The U.S. Justice Department in court filings has said that West Point is
a "vital pipeline to the officer corps" and that its race-conscious
admissions practices help the Army achieve its "mission critical" goal
of having officers as diverse as its enlisted military personnel.
Edward Blum, president of Students for Fair Admissions, in a statement
called race-conscious admissions "antithetical to our nation's military
institutions and mission."
"It is our hope that the Supreme Court will forbid West Point from using
racial classifications and preferences in their admissions process for
their incoming class going forward from today," Blum said.
His group's Supreme Court filing came after a federal judge rejected its
request for a preliminary injunction on Jan. 3 and rebuffed its request
for an emergency injunction the next day. The group appealed to the New
York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which has yet to rule on
their request.
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People attend the 2023 graduation ceremony at the United States
Military Academy (USMA), at Michie Stadium in West Point, New York,
U.S., May 27, 2023. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
The group sued last September challenging West Point's admissions
process on behalf of two Students for Fair Admissions members - a
high school student applying for the first time and a first-year
college student applying for the second time. Both students "are
fully qualified but white," the group said.
The lawsuit said West Point's admissions practices discriminated
against white applicants and violated the principle of equal
protection in the U.S. Constitution.
In invalidating admissions policies at Harvard and UNC last year,
the Supreme Court did not address race in admissions at military
academies, which Chief Justice John Roberts in a footnote said had
"potentially distinct interests."
President Joe Biden's administration, in defending the
race-conscious admissions policies used by the U.S. military
academies, said that senior military leaders long have recognized
that a scarcity of minority officers can create distrust within the
armed forces.
Although Black people make up 20.2% of the Army's active duty
enlisted personnel, only 11% of officers are Black, the Justice
Department said. Hispanic people constitute 18% of active personnel
but only 9% of officers, the department said.
White people by contrast constitute 51.7% of the Army active duty
enlisted corps and 68% of its officers, the Justice Department said.
(Reporting by John Kruzel; Additional Reporting by Nate Raymond;
Editing by Will Dunham)
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