Monterey Herald

Justices to hear challenge to race

- By Mark Sherman

The conservati­ve-dominated Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a challenge to the considerat­ion of race in college admissions, adding another blockbuste­r case to a term with 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.

Arguments are expected to take place in the fall.

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 four-justice 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.”

The court already has heard arguments in cases that could expand gun and religious rights and also roll back abortion rights in a direct challenge to the Roe v. Wade ruling from 1973.

On Thursday, the justice’s weighed in for the first time on President Joe Biden’s vaccine policies, halting a rule requiring a vaccine or testing at large businesses while allowing a vaccine mandate for most of the nation’s health care workers.

The affirmativ­e action case probably will be argued in the spring. Both suits were filed by Students for Fair Admissions, a Virginia-based group run by Edward Blum. He has worked for years to rid college admissions of racial considerat­ions, and the court’s new lineup breathed new life into his project.

The group is calling on the court to overturn its 2003 ruling in Grutter v. Bollinger, which upheld the University of Michigan’s law school admissions program.

The Biden administra­tion had urged the justices to stay away from the issue, writing in the Harvard case that the challenges “cannot justify that extraordin­ary step” of overruling the 2003 decision.

The Supreme Court has weighed in on college admissions several times over more than 40 years. The current dispute harks back to its first big affirmativ­e action case in 1978, when

Justice Lewis Powell set out the rationale for taking account of race even as the court barred the use of racial quotas in admissions.

In the Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, Powell approvingl­y cited Harvard as “an illuminati­ng example” of a college that takes “race into account in achieving the educationa­l diversity valued by the First Amendment.”

Twenty-five years later, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor likewise invoked the Harvard plan in her opinion in the Michigan law school case.

Now the Harvard program is under fire from opponents of race-based affirmativ­e action.

Students for Fair Admissions claims that Harvard imposes a “racial penalty” on Asian American applicants by systematic­ally scoring them lower in some categories than other applicants and awarding “massive preference­s” to Black and Hispanic applicants.

Harvard flatly denies that it discrimina­tes against Asian American applicants and says its considerat­ion of race is limited, pointing out that lower courts agreed with the university.

In 2020, the federal appeals court in Boston ruled that Harvard looked at race in a limited way in line with Supreme Court precedents.

Harvard’s freshman class is roughly one-quarter Asian American, 16% Black and 13% Hispanic, Harvard says on its website. “If Harvard were to abandon raceconsci­ous admissions, African-American and Hispanic representa­tion would decline by nearly half,” the school told the court in urging it to stay out of the case.

The Trump administra­tion had backed Blum’s case against Harvard and also filed its own lawsuit alleging discrimina­tion against Asian Americans and whites at Yale. The Biden administra­tion dropped the Yale suit.

North Carolina’s flagship public university prevailed in a federal district court in October. U.S. District Judge Loretta Biggs ruled that the school’s program was intended to produce a diverse student body and had shown the benefits of doing so.

The court accepted the North Carolina case for review even though it has not been heard by a federal appeals court. Blum filed a Supreme Court appeal with the hope that it would be bundled with the Harvard case so that the justices could rule on public and private colleges at the same time.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? An American flag waves in front of the Supreme Court building on Capitol Hill in Washington.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE An American flag waves in front of the Supreme Court building on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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