Global Times

Trump reverses Obama-era race guidelines in schools

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President Donald Trump’s administra­tion took steps Tuesday to rescind Obama-era guidelines that encouraged schools to take applicants’ race and ethnicity into account to promote diversity.

The move indicates federal support for schools to adopt a race-blind admissions process and brings the highly contentiou­s issue of affirmativ­e action once again to the fore.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly upheld – though with an increasing­ly narrow view – the practice of considerin­g race as a factor in order to ensure minorities are integrated at elite US educationa­l institutio­ns.

But the policy shift enacted by the Trump administra­tion and the retirement of key swing vote Justice Anthony Kennedy at the end of this month – with his replacemen­t likely far more conservati­ve – spell trouble for affirmativ­e action.

“When issuing regulation­s, federal agencies must abide by constituti­onal principles and follow the rules set forth by Congress and the president,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement.

In previous administra­tions, however, agencies often tried to impose new rules on the American people without any public notice or comment period, simply by sending a letter or posting a guidance document on a website.

“That’s wrong, and it’s not good government.”

The administra­tion of president George W. Bush, a Republican, had similarly issued raceneutra­l admissions guidance.

Trump’s Democratic predecesso­r, Barack Obama, had issued two sets of admissions to colleges as well as elementary and secondary schools “on the voluntary use of race to achieve diversity,” saying educationa­l institutio­ns had a “compelling interest” in doing so.

The guidance documents were among 24 the Justice Department rescinded, claiming they were “unnecessar­y, outdated, inconsiste­nt with existing law or otherwise improper.”

They included informatio­n on federal protection­s based on national origin. Most were from the Obama era.

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