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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Greg Stohr

Harvard urges Supreme Court to preserve affirmative action in college admissions

Harvard urged the U.S. Supreme Court to preserve affirmative action in college admissions, calling it necessary to ensure a diverse student body.

The Ivy League school filed its brief Monday in one of the most highly anticipated of the court’s upcoming cases. After the court’s recent overturning of Roe v. Wade and the expansion of concealed-carry gun rights, the abolition of affirmative action at elite universities is high on conservatives’ wish list.

The Supreme Court has previously upheld and reaffirmed the right of colleges to take race into account when deciding the composition of their classes, despite the 1964 Civil Rights Act’s bar on racial discrimination by universities that receive federal funding.

Harvard said in its brief that those cases were correctly decided and urged the court not to adopt a requirement for “color-blindness” in admissions.

‘Equal participation’

“Absolute neutrality has never been a universal constitutional principle,” Harvard argued, saying that the framers of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment saw race-conscious measures as necessary to ensure Black people’s “equal participation in society” following the Civil War.

The Supreme Court has become more conservative since it considered an affirmative-action challenge in 2003. The court earlier this year decided to consider lawsuits against both Harvard and the University of North Carolina brought by Students for Fair Admissions, a group that opposes racial preferences.

The court last week decoupled the two cases, paving the way for Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s participation. The newest justice isn’t taking part in the Harvard case, having recently completed a six-year stint on the university’s board of overseers.

A date for oral arguments in the cases has not yet been set. Based on their normal scheduling practices, the justices will probably hear the Harvard and UNC cases separately in the two-week session that starts Oct. 31. Decisions in both cases would likely come some time in 2023.

Affirmative action is common at selective universities, though nine states, including California and Florida, ban race-conscious admissions at public institutions.

Automatic preferences

Students for Fair Admissions says Harvard penalizes Asian Americans during the admissions process, assigning them lower ratings on leadership and likability, while automatically giving preferences to Black and Hispanic applicants.

Harvard rejected contentions that its admissions policy discriminates against Asian-Americans. It also said no other approach would ensure it could assemble a class comprising students of different backgrounds.

“Harvard must be allowed to consider race as one of many characteristics in admissions to achieve the compelling benefits of student-body diversity,” the college argued.

The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the Harvard policy in a 2-0 ruling.

The case is Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, 20-1199. The North Carolina case is Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina, 21-707.

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