The Denver Post

Trump revokes Obama race guidance to schools

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON» The Trump administra­tion on Tuesday rescinded Obama-era guidance that encouraged schools to take a student’s race into account to promote diversity in admissions.

The shift suggests schools will have the federal government’s blessing to leave race out of admissions and enrollment decisions, and it underscore­s the contentiou­s politics that continue to surround affirmativ­e action policies, which have repeatedly been challenged before the Supreme Court.

The admissions memos were among 24 policy documents revoked by the Justice Department for being “unnecessar­y, outdated, inconsiste­nt with existing law, or otherwise improper.”

Attorney General Jeff Sessions called the changes an effort to restore the “rule of law” and blamed past administra­tions for imposing new rules without seeking public comment.

The action comes amid a high-profile court fight over Harvard University admissions as well as Supreme Court turnover expected to produce a more critical eye toward schools’ race-conscious admissions policies.

The new policy dramatical­ly departs from the stance of the Obama administra­tion, which in a 2011 policy document said courts had recognized schools’ “compelling interest” in ensuring racially diverse population­s. The guidance said that while race shouldn’t be the primary factor in an admission decision, schools could lawfully consider it in the interest of achieving diversity.

“Institutio­ns are not required to implement race-neutral approaches if, in their judgment, the approaches would be unworkable,” the guidance said.

The Trump administra­tion’s announceme­nt is more in line with Bush-era policy that discourage­d affirmativ­e action and instead encouraged the use of race-neutral alternativ­es, such as percentage plans and economic diversity programs.

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