How Affirmative Action Lost at the Supreme Court
Preferential college admissions violated the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.

The end of affirmative action in university admissions has been prophesied since 2003, when the Supreme Court issued its decision in Grutter v. Bollinger. In the majority opinion, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote that "25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today." That reckoning has now arrived, and five years earlier than predicted: In June, the Supreme Court ruled 6–3 that public universities must stop favoring certain applicants, and disfavoring others, based on their race or ethnicity.
"Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it," Chief Justice John Roberts declared, writing for the majority in Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College. "In other words, the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual—not on the basis of race."
For everyone who values fairness, individuality, and nondiscrimination, this decision could not have come soon enough. The perniciousness of the admissions system was on full display, thanks to the details of the case. The plaintiff—an advocacy organization that filed suits against Harvard and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC)—persuasively demonstrated that race-based admissions schemes systematically disadvantaged Asian-American students. UNC, for instance, admitted more than 80 percent of its black applicants but less than 70 percent of its white and Asian applicants. (Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this magazine, submitted an amicus brief in support of the plaintiff.)
At Harvard, discriminatory practices were overt and began with recruitment. Admissions officials would send letters of interest to black and Hispanic high schoolers who received a score of 1100 or more on the SAT. Asian Americans were ignored unless they received at least a 1350. During the actual admissions process, students were sorted into "deciles"—10 levels of academic performance. Asian Americans in the top decile were less likely to get in than black students in the fourth decile.
The plaintiff also submitted evidence that Harvard admissions officers tended to give Asian Americans negative scores on the personality rating, a wholly subjective criterion. Favoritism also extended to white applicants from what Harvard describes as "sparse country": rural states with historically low enrollment numbers. The result was that applicants were judged not solely on the merits of their individual achievements but on immutable characteristics like their race and place of origin.
These schemes, according to the Supreme Court, violated federal law and, in UNC's case, the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. "Many universities have for too long wrongly concluded that the touchstone of an individual's identity is not challenges bested, skills built, or lessons learned, but the color of their skin," wrote Roberts. "This Nation's constitutional history does not tolerate that choice."
Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act prohibits entities that receive federal funding from practicing racial discrimination. But affirmative action—a scheme to benefit racial minorities in hiring, contracting, and school admissions—was viewed as an exception; the idea was to practice discrimination on behalf of historically marginalized groups in order to make amends for past wrongs.
In 2003, a pair of Supreme Court rulings involving the University of Michigan—Gratz v. Bollinger and the aforementioned Grutter—upended that justification. In Gratz, the Court held 6–3 that Michigan's undergraduate admissions program went too far in its consideration of race. The university used a point system, with 100 points guaranteeing admission; belonging to an underrepresented minority group was worth 20 points, while a perfect SAT score was worth only 12 points.
In Grutter, however, the Court permitted Michigan's law school to consider race as one factor among many in admissions decisions, on the grounds that a racially diverse student body was a "compelling interest" of the state. While the decision preserved affirmative action in some form—for perhaps 25 years, per O'Connor's time limit—it forced higher education administrators to change their reasoning: Henceforth, they would have to defend race-based admissions as diversity enhancement programs.
Whether affirmative action actually promotes diversity is up for debate, of course. Schools that engage in racial gerrymandering may succeed in making their campuses more diverse in the most superficial sense without doing anything to improve intellectual, political, socioeconomic, or geographic diversity. No one in a position to defend Harvard's admissions system ever argued that the school needed more conservative or libertarian representation; in practice, the institution's position was simply that it needed fewer Asians.
At a time when the Supreme Court is often accused of being out of touch and counter-majoritarian, it's worth mentioning that Students for Fair Admissions undeniably reflects the will of the people. Race-based admissions systems are opposed by 69 percent of poll respondents, including 58 percent of Democrats, according to The New York Times. Voters in California, a deep-blue state, banned affirmative action twice—in 1996 and again, for good measure, in 2020. Faced with this reality, many defenders of affirmative action are trying to change the subject.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.), for instance, complained that the Supreme Court had ignored a more serious example of unfairness in higher education. "If SCOTUS was serious about their ludicrous 'colorblindness' claims," she wrote on Twitter, "they would have abolished legacy admissions, aka affirmative action for the privileged." Other progressive Democrats, such as Reps. Cori Bush (D–Mo.) and Jamaal Bowman (D–N.Y.), made similar observations.
It should go without saying, but the justices declined to adjudicate legacy admissions because this issue was not before them. That said, legislators do not need to wait for the Court; they can and should abolish the practice within public institutions. The widespread practice of granting preferential treatment to the scions of alumni is unfair and has no place at taxpayer-funded colleges and universities.
The fact that legacy admissions still exist is not a reason to maintain affirmative action; eliminating explicit racial discrimination is a noble goal in and of itself. But to any naysayers who disdain the Supreme Court's ruling because they think legacy admissions should face the same fate: Your terms are acceptable.
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How did a policy which plainly violated the Constitution and any idea of individual justice not pass muster at the Supreme Court? Oh, yeah, cynical sophists appointed by Democrats no longer control the SCOTUS majority.
KJB actually had to be recused from the case, being that she was on fucking Harvard’s governing board at the time of the appeal.
“Cynical sophists appointed by Democrats” is putting it lightly. It would be more accurate to call them “key players in systemic racism” at our country’s institutes of higher education.
Agreed.
"Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act prohibits entities that receive federal funding from practicing racial discrimination."
Luckily KJB wasn't selected through racial or sexual discrimination, and the supreme court doesn't receive funding from the federal government. I'd ask why the government has to be so blatant with it's hypocrisy, but I already know. FYTW.
The Court isn't the one who engaged in discrimination, there.
It's got to suck for the ego being that public of a diversity hire.
Seriously, Joe Biden is a dick. All he had to do was not broadcast his selection criteria the way he did and it'd be a lot less brutal for her.
It’s part of FJB’s charm to brag about his criminal activities on camera:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azLKK0xTOFI
Haha yeah it must suck knowing she's only there because of her VAGINA and skin color.
But lets all take her oh-so-seriously.
You don't need to have one of those to be a woman these days.
That's true, sorry. The president, who is funded by federal dollars, did.
The strongest evidence of discrimination at Harvard College is that it hasn't had a Harvard graduate as president for the past 52 years.
Government has to define race for this to even be credible. Just like the Nazis. We had the same system the Nazis had: From full Black to octaroon and beyond. THis is why the eternall stupid Senator Warren could be an "Indian". She could , with assistance of US Law.
and why would anyone do this ?
"Native American tribes have been inundated by DNA test result-toting Caucasians seeking tribal certification for everything from eligibility for school scholarships to sought-after tax relief, genomics experts and geneticists said."
Wake up, Reason, you are defending racism by your take on affirmative action.
The Myth of Race
The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea
Robert Wald Sussman
Harvard University Press (same place Sen Warren taught at)
"Biological races do not exist—and never have. This view is shared by all scientists who study variation in human populations. Yet racial prejudice and intolerance based on the myth of race remain deeply ingrained in Western society. In his powerful examination of a persistent, false, and poisonous idea, Robert Sussman explores how race emerged as a social construct from early biblical justifications to the pseudoscientific studies of today."
The widespread practice of granting preferential treatment to the scions of alumni is unfair and has no place at taxpayer-funded colleges and universities.
Maybe we should be having a discussion about what IS the function of
taxpayerpublic debt-funded colleges and universities.Presumably discrimination of behalf of legacy admissions isn’t. Except that many of the commenters here implicitly support that sort of discrimination with their desire to perpetually tilt the state towards supporting the already wealthy.
My two bugaboos are:why the hell is the state even in the business of distorting and coaching professional sports and negotiating media contracts for them and using the state to eliminate pay for those athletes?
How much is the subsidy for said public colleges laid on the backs of high school dropouts?
"...Presumably discrimination of behalf of legacy admissions isn’t. Except that many of the commenters here implicitly support that sort of discrimination with their desire to perpetually tilt the state towards supporting the already wealthy..."
It must suck to be perpetually jealous of those who are successful.
Show us on the doll where the people inside your head touched you.
Quote of anyone defending or promoting legal admissions. Now show it's the majority of posters.
Favoring legacy admissions is a matter of financial survival to colleges though. Which alumni are going to donate generously if it doesn't buy them anything?
>>Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote "25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today."
lol but everything else ...
O'Connor didn't realize that once you put a system like that into place, you can never undo it because it becomes self perpetuating. The activists clan will always claim that we need those discriminations because we will never be able to undo the evils they supposedly were created to undo.
gotta be tough to be the Chick Pick and decry affirmative action.
Yes; Laws that entitle by race or sex are racist and sexist.
Thinking otherwise is exactly the stupidity of the left.
Course the left has always been the party of racism and sexism and everything they try to *project* onto anyone else they see. The party of slavery. The party of STEAL all your money and property for their own betterment of feeling thereof. Course their habitual projection helps them live with their evil. Just like criminals who can never accept they did anything wrong; it was all those people's fault.
After all; It is the party of “democracy” / Democrats. The [WE] mob RULES narrative is at the very foundation and as such that party will always be trying to define/categorize [WE] groups of exactly who the [WE] mob is and who they are going to RULE.
It’s a faulty platform from the very beginning because it never accepts Individualism. The very concept the USA was founded upon.
They might have been OK if they stuck to lightly tilting the odds but instead they went full hate-filled racist both here and in the society at large.
And against a group that could arguably state was discriminated against as bad as blacks. See the anti-chinese laws of the late 19th century. Japanese interment camps. Etc. In the western US especially, where blacks were sparse, Asians tended to be the main sin of racists laws (even more so than Amerindians and Hispanics). But Asians have largely overcome this past, largely due to their own actions, with little to no help from the government. Thus, progressives seem to maintain it's okay to discriminate against Asians, because they're now 'white adjacents'.
California should be planning reparations to Asian-Americans, which California actually discriminated against, rather than planning reparations to the descendants of slaves, when California was not a slave state.
"challenges bested, skills built, or lessons learned"
Ah, yes, that hippie "holistic" crap. There's a vast gap between an ideal system which gives proper account of life challenges in assessing applicants, and the real-world system where an objective measure of "obstacles overcome versus test scores" is impossible, because they don't have the skill to do that analysis if they wanted. Which they don't; they just want to be able to have fuzzy enough standards that they can get their racial-preference policies past the courts with a "we're just being holistic, man (puff, puff)" defense.
But if your skill is doing well in school and on standardized tests, well, we'll just have to dock you 150 points if your family encouraged you to study too much.
Instead, judge them based on essays about "what I found out in my family-financed trip to some poor-ass country where I Learned Important Lessons."
It's a good thing for fairness that this was added to the Constitution, in time for the...wait! what?...it's been in there since the 1860's?
But these issues have been before the Supreme Court, before, and they were never struck down?
Sounds like some Supreme justices didn't really know, or care, what the Constitution says.
Every effort must be made, to keep those kinds of judges, from sitting in the highest court in the land.
Any that are there, now, are worthy of impeachment.
How exactly does individual achievement work for the poor Black child of a single mother who can't afford SAT tutors and private school tuition?
Exactly the same way a poor white child of a single mother does it but they have to do it without all the perks of lefty-entitlement.
Under Harvard’s old rules, the Black daughter of a Black President and a Black lawyer would have been given a sizable numerical advantage on standardized test scores over the Asian-American daughter of a single Asian-American mother working two minimum wage jobs. Sounds racist.
First, why is she single? Funny, that is your 'take on this'.
Your right, the environment for the poor black child sucks. Who's fault is that?
We should give them infinity points for showing up!
Lot of people here missing the real problem: the idea that a compelling government interest trumps the Constitution.
Obviously AA violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. But our wisest Justice would have cast that aside, as a "superficial rule of colorblindness."
My friend was a state trooper in PA. PA had the quota system where they had to take a certain number of minorities no matter what. They would put them through the boot camp and graduate them.
Usually 6 months later, they would quit. One case I remember, in his full trunk,they found all these reports. He never did them because he couldn’t read or write.
Affirmative action – you aren’t good enough to get here on your own so we have to help you. You poor poor victims. You aren’t smart enough to save yourself so we have to do it.