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Negative Reaction
National Review ^ | 1/23/03 | NR Editors

Posted on 01/25/2003 4:15:18 PM PST by rdf

After months of debate inside his administration, President Bush decided to split the difference on racial preferences. At issue was whether the administration would submit a legal brief stating its position as the Supreme Court considered whether it was permissible for the University of Michigan to admit black and Hispanic students under easier standards than it applies to everyone else. Bush decided to submit a brief condemning the university's de facto quota. But the brief also said that "diversity" was a legitimate governmental goal. The university was, to be sure, required to try colorblind methods of achieving diversity. The brief offered the example of Texas's policy of automatically admitting the top 10 percent of any high-school class in the state to a state university. This "Texas solution," variants of which are also in place in Florida and California, increases the number of blacks and Hispanics on campus without engaging in any formal racial discrimination.

If these race-neutral methods do not "work" — that is, if they do not yield the desired numbers of blacks and Hispanics — are state universities then to be allowed to discriminate among applicants according to their race? Bush and his brief were silent on this point. The only members of his administration who spoke up on the subject were Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell, with the former approving of discrimination when nothing else would "work" and the latter approving even the University of Michigan's practices.

Most conservatives criticized the administration. On our back page, David Frum defends it by arguing that a nuanced brief is necessary to sway Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy. Frum assumes that these justices are looking for a brief they find congenial. But it may be more plausible to assume that they are looking for a political signal. They want to know what position will be considered mainstream. President Bush has just sent them a signal: A conservative president does not think that he can afford to stand unambiguously for colorblindness. The odds that the justices will also fudge their position have therefore increased.

The result could be that "diversity" attains a higher legal status than it has ever had before. The Supreme Court has previously held that the only possible justification for race-conscious admissions is to remedy past discrimination. Only one justice, in one case, has said that diversity can justify racial preferences (and then only if it proves to have educational value). The former justification, while debatable, is at least limited. Discrimination to achieve diversity, on the other hand, is pretty close to being discrimination for its own sake — and discrimination forever. If the administration had decided what to say about this case based on the legal merits, its brief would have looked very different. It would have said that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 forbids state universities from engaging in racial discrimination, whether to achieve diversity or for some other goal, whether as the first resort or the last.

As a policy matter, the Texas solution is no solution at all. It undermines merit more than racial preferences do. At least a preferential policy allowed colleges to apply meritocratic standards within each race. Under the Texas solution, one Hispanic student loses out to another merely because the rejected student went to a more academically challenging high school. Besides, once the administration has accepted that the goal of the Texas solution is to engineer a "diverse student body," liberal critics will notice that it does not do this job as well as preferences do. If it is okay to count by race at the end of the process, why not at the beginning?

If President Bush stood foursquare against state-sponsored discrimination, he would have a bitter fight on his hands. He clearly does not relish this, even though the public would be on his side in the fight. Instead, his dodge has ensured that he will again and again be forced to clarify what he means. Subsequent litigation will present the same question in different form. Can this preference program stand? Can this one? Each time, the stakes will be just as high, the so-called "civil rights groups" just as ready to accuse Bush of "turning back the clock."

We believe that racial preferences are immoral, both in themselves and in the duplicity that they seem to require; that they are a distraction from the task of helping blacks and Hispanics to make it in non-rigged academic and economic competitions; and that they add to America's racial strife. We would abolish state-sponsored racial discrimination in university admissions, in government contracting, and in private-sector employment. (The current "disparate impact" standard in the law treats companies as presumptively guilty of racial discrimination if their employees do not have the "correct" racial composition.)

Very few of these preferences have been enacted legislatively. Many of them contradict laws on the books. When the public has had a chance to vote on preferences, as in the referenda in California in 1996 and Washington state in 1998, colorblindness wins handily. The president does not want to fight about preferences, and the chief political response that Tom Daschle can think to make is to submit a Democratic brief to the Supreme Court. But this issue has been the playpen of legal elites for long enough. The failure of the political class to engage the issue of preferences, openly and without evasion, is a retreat from democracy.

(Excerpt) Read more at nationalreview.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: affirmativeaction; brief; bush; diversity
The verdict from NR:

Good speech, bad brief.

My own view:

Similar.

Conservatives can still make this a win, but that involves our keeping the ball in play. Al Gonzales, other political advisors, [probably, according to several sources, Karl Rove], pressure from Powell and Rice, have prevailed upon the President to make of this event a tactical victory at best.

To win the war, Connerly, Roger Clegg, Clint Bolick, Linda Chavez, and the rest of us must sieze the initiative.

Making the best of it, and cheerful as ever,

Richard F.

1 posted on 01/25/2003 4:15:18 PM PST by rdf
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To: rdf
probably, according to several sources, Karl Rove

Why must W. remain in this evil man's thrall?
2 posted on 01/25/2003 4:32:17 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: rdf
Sorry, but Bush punted on this.

One might wish he had been less distracted by intractible international issues.

One might even suspect that he was ill served by underlings who took advantage of the President's (necessary) attention to matters related to security.
3 posted on 01/25/2003 4:35:58 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: Scholastic
ping
4 posted on 01/25/2003 10:55:18 PM PST by rdf
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To: BenR2
One more conservative analysis, by Christopher Caldwell, that considers the brief a "punt" may be found

here

I count only four serious accounts that call it a big victory for color-blind law, Kmiec, Taranto, Fein, and now, if NR's editors are summarizing rightly, Frum.

Cheers,

Richard F.

5 posted on 01/26/2003 2:11:30 PM PST by rdf
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To: BenR2
Because Rove's genius is what got him in the WH...
6 posted on 01/26/2003 2:14:32 PM PST by marajade
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To: rdf
The brief from the administration represents the Bush past, present and future. He would like to apply the 10% solution to the US and he justifies it by attempting to make it color blind.

There are problems with that of course but it is a sstep in the right direction IMHO.

7 posted on 01/26/2003 2:16:57 PM PST by jwalsh07 (Boycott France, Germany and the UN)
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To: jwalsh07
There are problems with that [10% solution] of course but it is a step in the right direction IMHO.

If we see it as a mere step, it's a victory. If we see it as the end of the game, or a good policy in itself, it's a defeat.

Try applying 10% solutions to achieving diversity in faculty hiring, grad school, or non-academic situations, and see what you think of it.

The issue is far from settled, and we in the movement have work to do in the future.

Cheers,

Richard F.

8 posted on 01/26/2003 2:24:22 PM PST by rdf
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To: marajade
Because Rove's genius is what got him in the WH...

You are probably correct.

Unfortunately, however, it may just may be time for W. to listen to some fresh advice.
9 posted on 01/26/2003 3:02:54 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: rdf
Thank you for the link.

I am tempted to say that, on this issue, Bush back away from an opportunity that was handed him to go down as one of the "greats" in American history.

Of course, he may well achieve "greatness" on other matters, but, alas, not on this one, I fear.
10 posted on 01/26/2003 3:04:49 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: BenR2
You think Bush just exclusively listens to Rove? I highly doubt it...
11 posted on 01/26/2003 3:05:14 PM PST by marajade
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To: BenR2
sorry: "back" should have been "backed."
12 posted on 01/26/2003 3:05:22 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: marajade
You think Bush just exclusively listens to Rove? I highly doubt it...

Did I say that?

Certainly not. But, in matters dealing with re-election strategies, I believe Bush allows Rove to drown all others out (more often than not).
13 posted on 01/26/2003 3:06:55 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: BenR2
He should...
14 posted on 01/26/2003 3:15:02 PM PST by marajade
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To: marajade
He should...

Well, friend, may we simply agree to disagree on this, perhaps?

I think Bush should rather allow the Constitution and conscience -- and not mere short-term political expediency -- to govern in such instances.

Exhibit A in my view: Dealing in an honest and diligent fashion with out-of-control illegal immigration.
15 posted on 01/26/2003 3:20:10 PM PST by BenR2 ((How do you do the tag-line thing, again?))
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To: rdf
Thanks for thinking of me! Good editorial.
16 posted on 01/27/2003 6:22:25 AM PST by Scholastic
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