The Boston Globe

In rejecting affirmativ­e action, Justice Thomas is no hypocrite

- JEFF JACOBY Jeff Jacoby can be reached at jeff.jacoby@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @jeff_jacoby. To subscribe to Arguable, his weekly newsletter, visit globe.com/arguable.

The Supreme Court will soon decide a pair of cases dealing with racial preference­s at Harvard, the nation’s oldest private college, and the University of North Carolina, the oldest public university. How the court will rule is still unknown. But about two things we can be certain.

First, Justice Clarence Thomas will maintain, as he has in all his years on the court, that racial affirmativ­e action is incompatib­le with the 14th Amendment and therefore unlawful. Second, Thomas will be smeared as an ungrateful hypocrite for opposing race-conscious admissions when he himself was the beneficiar­y of such policies.

If there is any point on which Thomas has been rock-solid, it is his conviction that admitting students to college on the basis of color is illegitima­te as a matter of law and insidious as public policy. “The Constituti­on abhors classifica­tions based on race,” Thomas wrote in the 2003 case of Grutter v. Bollinger. “Every time the government places citizens on racial registers and makes race relevant to the provision of burdens or benefits, it demeans us all.”

Thomas’s antipathy toward any form of discrimina­tion by race is rooted in his own life story.

He was born in the segregated Deep South and knew the stinging bigotry of Jim Crow at first hand. He attended the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, which recruited him as part of a program to attract Black men as undergradu­ates. In 1971, when Thomas entered Yale to study law, the school’s stated goal was for 10 percent of incoming students to be nonwhite. Though Thomas initially reveled in his admission to Yale, he soon felt the stigma of being there because of his race.

“I learned the hard way that a law degree from Yale meant one thing for white graduates and another for blacks,” he later wrote in his poignant autobiogra­phy, “My Grandfathe­r’s Son.” He had done well at Yale, but the law firms he subsequent­ly interviewe­d with made it plain that they applied an affirmativ­e action discount to his Ivy League credential­s and assumed he wasn’t really as smart as his grades indicated.

“The worst forms of racial discrimina­tion in this nation have always been accompanie­d by straight-faced representa­tions that discrimina­tion helped minorities,” Thomas declared in a fiery 2013 opinion in Fisher v. University of Texas. Just as the champions of affirmativ­e action claim to be acting in the best interests of society at large and Black people in particular, so did the champions of segregatio­n, leading Thomas to observe that “the lesson of history is clear enough: Racial discrimina­tion is never benign.”

No fair-minded person can doubt that Thomas’s legal and moral rejection of racial preference­s is deeply rooted.

But many people are not fair-minded. Again and again, Thomas has been blasted for hypocrisy and ingratitud­e by critics who loathe him for opposing affirmativ­e action despite the race-conscious policies that enabled him to rise in the world.

The attacks can be venomous. “It’s impossible not to be disgusted at someone who could benefit so much from affirmativ­e action and then pull up the ladder after himself,” Maureen Dowd wrote in The New York Times. When Thomas casts his “inevitable” vote against racial preference­s, Earl Ofari Hutchinson fumed in a HuffPost column, he should be asked “how and why someone who has been the biggest beneficiar­y of affirmativ­e action could be the biggest hypocrite in opposing it.”

The argument is absurd.

At the most basic level, judges are never supposed to be swayed in judgment by personal considerat­ions or loyalties. They take an oath to administer justice and uphold the Constituti­on “faithfully and impartiall­y,” without regard to their personal history. If Thomas concludes that affirmativ­e action is unlawful, his job is to vote against it — period.

Would Thomas’s foes raise the charge of hypocrisy in any other context? Imagine a case involving the legality of legacy preference­s in college admissions. If some justices got into law school on the strength of family ties, should that oblige them to support legacy admissions as a matter of law? When a case involving a president comes before the court, are justices who were appointed by that president ungrateful hypocrites if they don’t automatica­lly rule in his favor?

Affirmativ­e action may have played a role in launching Thomas’s career, but that fact does not bind him to support racial preference­s. Those who attack his “hypocrisy” are really attacking him because he is a Black man who doesn’t share their view. However they dress it up, that is what they find intolerabl­e.

 ?? ALLISON V. SMITH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Affirmativ­e action may have played a role in launching Justice Clarence Thomas’s career, but that fact does not bind him to support racial preference­s.
ALLISON V. SMITH/THE NEW YORK TIMES Affirmativ­e action may have played a role in launching Justice Clarence Thomas’s career, but that fact does not bind him to support racial preference­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States