The U.S. Supreme Court said Tuesday that it will revisit the issue of
affirmative action in higher education. The Court agreed to hear
arguments next fall in a case that challenges the affirmative action
program at the University of Texas. By re-entering the fray after
more than thirty years of settled law on the issue, the newly energized
conservative court majority has signaled that it may be willing to
unsettle much of that law.
Nine years ago the high court, by a
5-to-4 vote, reaffirmed a 1978 decision declaring that race can be one
of many factors that may be considered in college admissions.
The
author of that 2003 opinion, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, said that
while quotas are not permissible, "racial diversity is an essential
part of higher education's mission," and thus race can be a plus
factor, just like being the child of an alumnus can be a plus factor, or
having athletic or musical talent.
But just two years after
writing that landmark opinion, O'Connor retired and was replaced by
Justice Samuel Alito, who has quite consistently been hostile to the
idea of racial preferences in any form.
So when the Supreme Court
decided on Tuesday to revisit the issue, the clear suggestion was that
a new and far more conservative court majority may be prepared to
reverse or severely cut back on more than three decades of precedent
dealing with affirmative action in college and university admissions.
In
addition to Alito, three other justices have been overtly antagonistic
to the idea of affirmative action Clarence Thomas, Antonin Scalia,
and Chief Justice John Roberts. In a 2007 opinion, Roberts wrote that
racial balancing in schools "cannot be transformed into a
constitutional practice by labeling it diversity," and diversity is
precisely the objective of the Texas program at all levels, down to the
classroom.
The fifth potential vote against Texas would be
Justice Anthony Kennedy, who generally has taken a less hostile tone.
Nonetheless, Kennedy has never voted to support a voluntary
affirmative action program.
Making matters even more grim for
supporters of affirmative action is the fact that only eight justices
will hear the case. Justice Elena Kagan has recused herself because
prior to her nomination to the Court, when she served as solicitor
general in the Obama administration, her office was involved in the case
during the lower court proceedings.
The Texas affirmative action
program is something of a hybrid. Most of the student slots are
allocated by formula. Students in the top 10 percent of a high school's
graduating class get automatic admissions. Approximately 81 percent of
the school's slots were allocated this way nearly four years ago when
the lawsuit was brought on behalf of a disappointed student named
Abigail Fisher.
Fisher was not in the top 10 percent of her high
school graduating class, and she claimed that she was disadvantaged by
the system used to choose the remaining 19 percent of the students.
That is where race is considered, along with grades, a personal essay,
character, special talents and special circumstances such as the social
economic status of the student's family.
Fisher contended that
because she had a higher grade point average than some of the minority
students who were accepted, she was the victim of illegal
discrimination. Two lower courts, however, disagreed, and upheld the
university's affirmative action program.
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