Marin Independent Journal

West Point allowed to use race in admissions for now

- By Abbie Vansickle

>> The Supreme Court has declined to temporaril­y block raceconsci­ous admissions at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, clearing the way for the school to continue considerin­g race as a factor in selecting the class that will enroll in the fall.

The court's order Friday rejected a request for emergency relief from Students for Fair Admissions, a conservati­ve group that has repeatedly challenged the considerat­ion of race in higher education, as a lawsuit moves forward. It had asked the justices to act swiftly because West Point was poised to stop accepting applicatio­ns on Jan. 31.

In its order, the court said that the record was “underdevel­oped.” Its denial “should not be construed as expressing any view on the merits of the constituti­onal question,” it added, signaling that the justices could consider the issue in the future. There were no noted dissents.

The founder of Students for Fair Admissions, Edward Blum, cast the court's decision as a setback. “It is disappoint­ing that the young men and women who apply to West Point for the foreseeabl­e future will have their race used as a factor to admit or reject them,” he said in a statement.

The group successful­ly challenged race-conscious admissions at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina during the court's last term, effectivel­y ending a policy that colleges across the nation had relied on for decades to increase racial diversity.

Blum appears to have tailored the challenge to focus on a group of institutio­ns excluded from that ruling: military academies.

In June, the justices, in a 6-3 decision split along ideologica­l lines, declared that the admissions programs at Harvard and of North Carolina were unlawful.

In the majority opinion,

Chief Justice John Roberts, in a footnote, limited the reach of the decision by exempting military academies.

The court's decision did not extend to those institutio­ns, which include West Point, the Naval Academy and the Air Force Academy, because they have “potentiall­y distinct interests,” he wrote.

Less than three months after the decision was announced, Students for Fair Admissions filed suit against West Point, claiming that the institutio­n's admissions practices violated the Constituti­on.

West Point heralds the diversity of its student body on its website. The most recently enrolled class, slated to graduate in 2027, includes about 1,250 students. Roughly 38% are racial minorities, including 127 African Americans, 137 Hispanic Americans, 170 Asian Americans and 18 Native Americans.

Students for Fair Admissions contended that the government had misinterpr­eted Roberts' footnote as an exception for military academies. “Far from a carve-out,” the group said in its petition seeking relief, the court's decision curtailing race-conscious admissions did not address military academies only because the Supreme Court “didn't know how they used race.”

Admissions at the country's oldest military academy violated the standard establishe­d in the Harvard case “worse than Harvard itself,” the group argued.

It said that West Point acted with “unchecked racial discrimina­tion,” awarding racial preference to three groups of applicants: Black, Hispanic and Native American candidates. The petition added that the school “uses race to determine which office reviews applicatio­ns, how many early offers it makes and what scores applicants need to get.”

Students for Fair Admissions urged the court to act quickly because “every year this case languishes in discovery, trial or appeals, West Point will label and sort thousands more applicants based on their skin color.”

In a brief for the government, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar said the current admissions process at West Point should stay in place, arguing that the request by Students for Fair Admissions would force the academy “to jettison admissions procedures that the Army has deemed a military imperative for generation­s.”

It described the Jan. 31 deadline as arbitrary because West Point had been reviewing applicatio­ns since August and had “already issued offers to hundreds of candidates,” making up a substantiv­e portion of the slots for the class of 2028.

Racial diversity among military leaders was vital for national security, the brief added.

“For more than 40 years, our nation's military leaders have determined that a diverse Army officer corps is a national-security imperative and that achieving that diversity requires limited considerat­ion of race in selecting those who join the Army as cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point,” Prelogar wrote.

“A lack of diversity in leadership can jeopardize the Army's ability to win wars,” she added, citing how “decades of unaddresse­d internal racial tension erupted during the Vietnam War.”

The Biden administra­tion touched on military academies when it filed a brief in support of Harvard and North Carolina last term. White service members account for 53% of the active-duty military overall, but 73% of officers, the government said, noting that by contrast, Black service members make up 18% of the active force but 8% of officers. About 1 in 5 officers comes from one of the military academies.

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