The Originalist Debate About Affirmative Action
The Supreme Court grapples with the original meaning of the 14th Amendment in Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina.

The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments last month in Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina, which asks whether state colleges and universities should be prohibited from using race as a factor in determining admissions. Under Supreme Court precedent, when the government (including a state university) takes race into account, the government's actions are subject to "strict scrutiny," the most searching form of judicial review. To satisfy strict scrutiny review, the government must show, first, that its actions serve a "compelling interest," and, second, that its actions are "narrowly tailored" to achieve that interest. Strict scrutiny is typically a high judicial hurdle to clear.
But there was another big question lurking around the perimeter of the case. Namely, does the original meaning of the 14th Amendment—which says that no state may "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws"—allow or disallow affirmative action in higher ed admissions?
Standing on one side of that debate is Justice Clarence Thomas, who has long maintained that "the Equal Protection Clause strips States of all authority to use race as a factor in providing education." "All applicants must be treated equally under the law," Thomas wrote in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin (2013), "and no benefit in the eye of the beholder can justify racial discrimination."
On the other side is a friend of the court brief filed in support of the University of North Carolina by a group of historians and legal scholars, including self-described originalists, who maintain that "nothing in the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment…clearly prohibits race-conscious admissions policies. Rather, as demonstrated by the Fourteenth Amendment's text and historical context, the Reconstruction Framers understood the Amendment to bar States from enacting and enforcing laws that subordinated people based on race and to permit as constitutional actions designed to ameliorate the conditions of members of a subordinated race."
Regrettably, that originalist debate did not get much airtime during last month's oral arguments, But it did pop up in one notable exchange. Shortly after Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar positively invoked the historians' brief, Justice Amy Coney Barrett told her, "I agree with you, when you look at the originalist evidence…that some race-conscious measures were permitted at least in a remedial sense, right? Desegregation is an example of that." But, asked Barrett, how does that history affect modern strict scrutiny review? "If you were writing on a blank slate, would you say that university affirmative action programs don't implicate the Fourteenth Amendment? Or are you saying that they just very plainly would satisfy our modern tiers of scrutiny because the interest is compelling?"
Prelogar conceded that "because they involve racial classifications," the admissions programs should face strict scrutiny. "We're not suggesting that under an originalist case, they would just be automatically exempt."
It was a notable exchange for a few reasons. For one, Barrett seemed at least possibly open to the idea that the originalist evidence in this case cuts in favor of affirmative action. At the same time, however, Barrett extracted from Prelogar the concession that, in the government's view, the originalist evidence was not dispositive for the ultimate outcome of the case. In other words, even with history on its side, the school's admission program should still face heightened judicial review, which means that Barrett could still vote against the program on strict scrutiny grounds, even in the face of originalist evidence that supports the program.
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You cannot favor or punish races. You can only favor or punish individuals. If you making decisions on an individual based on their racial characteristics, then you are not treating them as a person with a moral value of their own. You are treating them as a part of a collective. The argument that the law can discriminate based on race would turn the idea of equal protection on its head. Also, what in 2022 would count as a "subordinate race"? How long can that status last?
what in 2022 would count as a “subordinate race”? How long can that status last?
Apparently for well over 100, 000 years now, and counting.
"Lived experience;" IOW, whatever anyone with a claim to victim status [aka "intersectionality"]says it is.
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First, even if UNC were private, it would have to obey the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which makes no reference to favored or disfavored races, but simply bans racial discrimination in federally-subsidized higher education (i. e., almost all of it).
The Supreme Court for whatever reason tied the 1964 Act to the 14th Amendment, but for what reason I can't quite tell.
So they could just say never mind the 14th Amendment for now, universities can't discriminate based on race if they get federal funds, get back to us when you've renounced the federal funding and then we'll tell you if the 14th Amendment lets you discriminate.
As to the 14th Amendment itself, the "originalist" scholarship seems to show that at the time of ratification the feds engaged in race discrimination. But what does that tell us? The equal-protection clause applies to the states only, not the feds (unless you're one of those penumbra-hunters who find an "equal protection component" in the Fifth Amendment).
The authors of the 14th Amendment knew how to bind the feds if they wanted to - don't pay Confederate debts, don't let ex-Confederates in federal office unless they've been legislatively pardoned. They chose not to apply the equal protection clause to themselves. Would it be so surprising, then, that they did racist stuff they prohibited the states from doing? "Do as I say, not as I do" is a timeless principle of legislation.
Please try to be consistent.
Many, if not most, private universities also receive federal funding.
It's not all tuition funding, either.
Fine, put quotes around "private." There, does that do it for you?
You two both missed the point. Put quotes around "private", and you've undercut your own "even if".
Are you comparing a truly private institution against a federally subsidized one, or not? Are you trying to argue the 1964 law affects truly private institutions, or not?
Make up your mind. One way or the other.
*Sigh* – I was suggesting that the 1964 act applies to basically every college. And I think I’m right about that one, so there’s no need even to get into the 14th Amendment.
As to using the term “private,” the boundaries between public and private are ever-shifting, as the social-media situation indicates.
Maybe someday the courts will decide that with enough government aid, a private entity crosses the magical line between private entity and government entity subject to the Constitution.
That fascinating argument isn't relevant to this case because whatever you call a federally-subsidized college (and the courts haven't called them all public), there's an anti-discrimination law which applies to them so it makes no difference whether the courts call them governmental entities of not.
And he looked from government to corporation, and from corporation to government, and from government to corporation again, and he could no longer tell which was which…
"The Supreme Court for whatever reason tied the 1964 Act to the 14th Amendment"
Not the story; Democrats tied THEIR 1964 Civil Rights Act to the amendment to *entitle* people over other people's property rights.
As Democrats are absolutely famous for doing. They turned inherent rights into *entitlements* and their racist entitlements have been progressing ever since.
Slavery (honest racism) ended in 1865 with the Civil War under Republican Abraham Lincoln and a Constitutional Amendment. The *LEGISLATION* of the Civil Rights Act probably served a purpose at the time but it's one of those bills that probably should be repealed now that it's getting abused.
And that pretty much paints the whole picture of the disparity between the two parties doesn't it.
Republicans - WE want freedom!
Democrats - WE want *entitlements* to other people's things.
Funny, the 1964 Civil Rights Act passed with mostly Republican votes, because most of the Democrats weren't voting for it.
Fair enough. Just be sure to ignore the concept was written by Emanuel Celler (D-NY) and signed into law by Lyndon B. Johnson[D] with a Democratic majority in both the House and Senate.
Reasoning for the majority Republican support? Southern Slave-State Democrats filibustered it because of their obvious racism.
Reasons the the majority of Republican nays? Government over-reach into private property.
https://www.centralmaine.com/2014/07/19/goldwaters-vote-against-civil-rights-act-of-1964-unfairly-branded-him-a-racist/
using race as a factor in determining admissions.
*looks around room, wondering if anyone realizes what we call this*
Institutional racism? Do I win a cookie?
Yes, but it won't be chocolate chip, especially not white chocolate chip, nor with butterscotch chips.
Who cares what “framers” though — what did the words mean to the people who ratified the amendment? Did “deny to any person . . . the equal protection of the law” mean “deny to any black person . . .”?
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RU talking about treasonous Nazi-Law or USA-Law?
Cause frankly; In the USA Nazi-Law isn't 'the law' at all but a bunch of [WE] mobs/gangs making their own form of government to conquer the USA.
> The Reconstruction Framers understood the Amendment to bar States from enacting and enforcing laws that subordinated people based on race...
Yes, indeed. And that's exactly what affirmative action does: enact and enforce laws that subordinate people based on race. Just ask anyone who got denied admission for the crime of being too Asian.
The real solution, of course, is to privatize the damned colleges. As in privatize government colleges AND move all student aid to be direct to students rather than direct to colleges (which puts them under all that titled government crap).
The real solution, of course, is to privatize the damned colleges. As in privatize government colleges AND move all student aid to be direct to students rather than direct to colleges (which puts them under all that titled government crap).
A. I'm not sure that will ever happen. And.
2. If you had a 146% private University, and they put out a memo titled "If it ain't white, it ain't right" which declared "No more niggers and kikes", I'd guess there'd be some grounds and standing for lawsuits.
>>when the government (including a state university) takes race into account, the government's actions are subject to "strict scrutiny,"
races for government to take into account do not exist.
'....Under Supreme Court precedent...' i.e. words and phrases someone pulled out of his or her rear end without bothering to point to a word or phrase in the Constitution itself, that mentions, much less supports the precedent. Sorta like the precedent they created in 'separate but equal' or women's true role (according to the Constitution) is to be controlled by her husband and make and raise babies.
Filburn got jobbed.
On the other side is a friend of the court brief filed in support of the University of North Carolina by a group of historians and legal scholars, including self-described originalists,
Anybody can call themselves an originalist. It doesn't make it true. KBJ during oral claimed to be making an originalist argument when she said the 14th required discrimination. Her claim was wrong.
It is similar to many self described libertarians on this site who defend virtually all leftist positions.
Reading things past clear and concise words is not originalist. Changing definitions is not origionalist.
Anybody can call themselves an originalist.
The originalist interpretation of Section 230 means blocking all sexually-related content, including transitioning, to minors via the internet. The CDA is the original reading of section 230 and it includes section 231, explicitly banning sexual content to unverified individuals and/or minors, ergo, online trannie chatting with minors is illegal by an originalist interpretation of S230.
Heck, Jack Balkin calls himself an originalist. And he explicitly has as his goal abolishing any real difference between originalism and living constitutionalism in favor of "living originalism".
"Rather, as demonstrated by the Fourteenth Amendment's text and historical context, the Reconstruction Framers understood the Amendment to bar States from enacting and enforcing laws that subordinated people based on race and to permit as constitutional actions designed to ameliorate the conditions of members of a subordinated race.""
It's funny they didn't write the 14th amendment to actually say that, then.
The Freedmen's bureau engaged in actions designed to ameliorate the conditions of former slaves, "freedmen".
Not "members of a subordinated race", but people who had personally been subordinated. If you hadn't been personally subordinated, they did diddly squat for you.
In the case of affirmative action the compelling interest would be to achieve equal protection under the laws for people who were being discriminated against, not remediation. Narrowly tailored would only correct a discrimination against a group of people, not by allowing people who are not good students to attend school over someone who is a better student. There is no evidence that people of color, for example, are poor students because of discrimination against them based on color. Government entities were specifically forbidden from using quotas to determine or correct discrimination in employment although, of course, they DID use quotas and pretended that they were NOT using quotas. So there is no compelling state interest in correcting poor performance in high school by people of color by accepting them into college over people of a different color who performed well in high school; and doing so would not be a narrowly tailored method of correcting poor educational outcomes. Therefor affirmative action in higher education admissions does not satisfy strict scrutiny for equal protection under the law. In fact, it discriminates against some people in order to help other people. Another example of 'it sounds good so it must be good even if it doesn't work.'
Note how the language is chosen to hide the issues. Affirmative action means steps like requiring jobs and education opportunities to be advertised where people of all races can see them. It doesn't mean race preferences. Similarly "race conscious" programs include these elements.
But why use this broad language when the objection is specifically to race preferences and not these other activities? It's because they want you to think that "some" race conscious policies might be acceptable so you are motivated to find justifications against the plaintiff even though in reality you agree with them. It's a subtle kind of strawman, misleading the reader as to what is actually at issue.
The originalist argument doesn't work. Root doesn't identify the actual specifics he claims exist, but the case objection is:
Rather, as demonstrated by the Fourteenth Amendment's text and historical context, the Reconstruction Framers understood the Amendment to bar States from enacting and enforcing laws that subordinated people based on race and to permit as constitutional actions designed to ameliorate the conditions of members of a subordinated race."
But this is clearly false. There is no mention of "members of a subordinated race" in the 14th Amendment, and whatever history he is referencing is irrelevant. Originalism means original publicly understood meaning, not original intent. The latter is a strawman used by those who oppose it. The original public meaning of the equal protection clause is to prohibit disparate treatment by race.
It's sad the flagship "libertarian" magazine is publishing such drivel.
Racial discrimination is bad, and anyone promoting it is a scumbag, regardless of what euphemisms they use to hide their goals.
-jcr
Every leftard, "But, but... The new 'woke' narrative is Racial entitlement is good. But don't anyone dare think that entitlement pertains to those insignificant evil white folk... You might get the reasonable impression that entitling one race puts others into our narrated blind-spot of discrimination."
- How the left fools the masses about not being the most racist and sexist party ever to hit the USA.
And from whatever source that entitlement rests upon just doesn't exist in the ignorant minds of leftards. It's just pulled from that magical Gov-GUN tree. It's the party of DEMAND without any acknowledgement of a Supply.
OK, I've come to the conclusion that anyone making an *o*riginalist argument, in 2022, on the premise of "members of a subordinated race" is making an originalist claim without understand what the words they themselves are speaking mean contemporaneously, and that we'd all be better off if they were just shot in the face.
Objectively; ordinate race = first race and every race after it is a subordinate race. Ergo, First Nations people aren't members of an subordinated race, everyone else is.
Maybe they mean subjugated race. Maybe they're trying to roll second-class citizens and minority races together more tightly. Either way originalists making an argument without knowing what the words they say in a modern context mean? Bullet to the face.
The terms "race conscious" and "racist" share the same definition.
There is bound to be an entirely overlooked penumbra in the US constitution that allows, even mandates, the practice of institutional racism in university admission decisions.
If the schools end up providing affirmative action to students who live in certain zip codes or students who are low income they'll be sued by the same whiners. After all, if you pay for expensive SAT prep courses and your kid still doesn't get in, of course you are being discriminated against.
Who also would have thought that Equal Protection would require discrimination against Asians? As Asians are the individuals getting the most heavily disadvantaged by affirmative action policies in present day.
The Northern Whites who drafted the 14th amendment most certainly understood the need to provide real equality to black citizens.
It's easy to see affirmative action for black admission to college in a former slave state as consistent with the 14th amendment.
Discriminating for/against immigrants seems well outside the scope of Reconstruction.
The use of the term 'originalist' in order to effect revisionism is pretty mind blowing. Apparently, 'originalism' doesn't have anything to do with the founding of the country, the Founding Fathers, The Constitution, or the Bill of Rights, but can be used to whimsically jump to any bill or piece of legislation and steal all the contemporaneously stolen bases you like.
Roe v. Wade establishing a right to privacy is an originalist interpretation! Brown v. Board establishing separate but equal is an originalist interpretation!
Originalism is whatever the fuck I say it is! Who said that? Me! Just now!
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.... traditional universities like Yale, or Harvard,..... are not state universities. They are private.
Now, as recipients of tons of Federal grant money, they can get roped into following anti-discrimination rules as a condition of accepting that cash, but they don't have to do that.
"You have to be retarded, or close to it, to believe this was the case."
Nope, just dishonest.
Are the Ivy league schools (all private) subject to title 9?
Dishonesty requires disbelief.
Democrats. Democrats love legislating things on the basis of race. They never stopped doing it actually. And that's why we call them racists.