Connecticut Post

Justices to hear challenge to race in college admissions

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The conservati­ve-dominated Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a challenge to the considerat­ion of race in college admissions, adding affirmativ­e action to major cases on abortion, guns, religion and COVID-19 already on the agenda.

The court said it will take up lawsuits claiming that Harvard University, a private institutio­n, and the University of North Carolina, a state school, discrimina­te against Asian American applicants. A decision against the schools could mean the end of affirmativ­e action in college admissions.

Lower courts rejected the challenges, citing more than 40 years of high court rulings that allow colleges and universiti­es to consider race in admissions decisions. But the colleges and universiti­es must do so in a narrowly tailored way to promote diversity.

The court’s most recent pronouncem­ent was in 2016, in a 4-3 decision upholding the admissions program at the University of Texas against a challenge brought by a white woman. But the compositio­n of the court has changed since then, with the addition of three conservati­ve justices who were appointed by then-President Donald Trump.

Two members of that fourjustic­e majority are gone from the court: Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died in 2020, and Justice Anthony Kennedy retired in 2018.

The three dissenters in the case, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, remain on the court. Roberts, a moderating influence on some issues, has been a steadfast vote to limit the use of race in public programs, once writing, “It is a sordid business, this divvying us up by race.”

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