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Symposium: A win for wealthy students

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Richard D. Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation, is author of The Remedy: Class, Race, and Affirmative Action, and the editor of The Future of Affirmative Action: New Paths to Higher Education Diversity after Fisher v. University of Texas.

Todays decision in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin supporting racial preferences at the University of Texas at Austin by a four-to-three margin was a shocker. As Justice Samuel Alito noted in dissent, Something strange has happened since our prior decision in this case.

In the Courts first decision in the case, in 2013 Justice Anthony Kennedy tightened the screws on racial affirmative action policies, declaring that universities bear the ultimate burden of demonstrating, before turning to racial classifications, that available, workable race-neutral alternatives do not suffice. The Court supported the goal of racial diversity but appeared to push colleges to employ alternative means such as providing a leg up to economically disadvantaged students of all races before resorting to race per se. The Fisher I Court emphasized that universities would receive no deference on the question of whether the use of race is necessary to achieve the educational benefits of diversity.

Fisher I sent the case back to the Fifth Circuit to apply the new standard. When the lower court came back with a decision supporting the use of race in admissions, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case again on appeal. Supporters of affirmative action were worried: why would the Justices take the case if they were happy with the lower court decision?

Fisher I was a compromise seven-to-one ruling which deferred two key questions: (1) what is sufficient racial diversity (i.e., what constitutes a critical mass of minority students)? (2) what makes a race-neutral strategy workable vs. unworkable?

In Fisher II, we got the answers, intellectually unsatisfying though they may be. Although the term critical mass by its nature suggests a numerical measure, the majority said the compelling interest that justifies consideration of race in college admissions is not an interest in enrolling a certain number of minority students. So how do we know when a critical mass has been achieved? The majority referenced the goal of providing an academic environment that offers a robust exchange of ideas, exposure to differing cultures, preparation for the challenges of an increasingly diverse workforce, and acquisition of competencies required of future leaders. All laudable goals, to be sure, but what level of diversity is required to achieve these outcomes? The majority doesnt say.

In taking a stab at the critical mass concept, Abigail Fishers attorneys argued that, because the University of Texas had achieved higher levels of black and Latino representation in 2004 (without using race) than it had in 1996 (using race), race-neutral alternatives had sufficed in producing a critical mass. That is, if UT had seen a given threshold of representation as constituting a critical mass when using race, the use of race-neutral alternatives to get an even better result would be an important benchmark of success. But in Fisher II, Justice Kennedys majority opinion suggested the numbers were insufficient because they showed stagnation, implying that critical mass is not only hard to define but also a dynamic and ever-changing concept.

What makes a race-neutral alternative workable vs. unworkable in the Courts eyes? Fishers attorneys suggested that socioeconomic affirmative action could produce substantial amounts of racial diversity. There is a good deal of evidence suggesting that when a university looks not just at income but other socioeconomic factors, such as wealth, and neighborhood poverty levels, that considerable racial diversity can be achieved. But in a highly revealing passage, the majority said enhanced consideration of socioeconomic disadvantage was not a viable alternative in part because the Equal Protection Clause does not force universities to choose between a diverse student body and a reputation for academic excellence.

The elitist subtext of this passage is that that programs that rely on recruiting economically disadvantaged students to achieve racial and economic diversity inherently conflict with high academic standards. The majoritys opinion (a skimpy twenty pages) provided no empirical support for the idea that disadvantaged students cannot do the work at selective colleges. Indeed, extensive researchfrom The Century Foundation shows that there are ample numbers of academically talented low-income and minority students who can be successful at the nations most selective colleges.

The majority acknowledged that the Top Ten Percent Plan can provide a path out of poverty for those who excel at schools lacking in resources. But it nevertheless faulted the plan for capitalizing on the reality of racially segregated neighborhoods and schools. As Georgetown Universitys Sheryll Cashin has noted, however, from a moral perspective, hard-working black and Latino students who are the victims of segregation are more deserving than the type of student championed by UTs race-conscious plans the African-American or Hispanic child of successful professionals in Dallas.

In his dissent, Justice Alito hammered the majority on its dismissal of programs like economic affirmative action and the Top Ten Percent Plan that help disadvantaged students of all races. UT has claimed, Alito noted, that the race-based component of its plan is needed because the Top Ten Percent Plan admits the wrong kind of African-American and Hispanic students, namely, students from poor families who attend schools in which the student body is predominantly African-American or Hispanic. As Alito noted, the argument turns affirmative action on its head. Affirmative-action programs were created to help disadvantaged students.

There was no evidence in the record, Alito noted, that black and Hispanic students admitted through the Top Ten Percent Plan struggled academically; indeed, they received higher college grades than the African-American and Hispanic students admitted under the race-conscious program.

Alito also took aim at UTs argument that although the Top Ten Percent Plan produces substantial racial diversity, the interests in the educational benefits of diversity would not be met if all of [the] minority students werecoming from depressed socioeconomic backgrounds. This argument is flawed as an empirical matter: about one-third of African-American students would be admitted to top universities without consideration of race, and those students are disproportionately wealthy. Moreover, Alito said, the argument that a program that tends to admit poor and disadvantaged minority students is inadequate because it does not work to the advantage of those who are more fortunate is affirmative action gone wild.

While UT fancied itself as a champion of racial justice, Alito noted that the university has in fact been embroiled in a scandal over providing admissions preferences for influential alumni. Of course, eliminating legacy preferences could be considered a powerful race-neutral strategy for improving racial diversity, but with the Fisher II decision, the likelihood of institutions taking such action is diminished.

There were some inklings in the Fisher II decision of the old, more skeptical, Justice Kennedy from Fisher I. Kennedy pointed out that the UT program is sui generis, standing alone, suggesting a possible limit on the decisions reach. And he hinted that the need for racial preferences to create a critical mass of students will diminish over time as the nation grows more black and brown. UT must continue to assess whether changing demographics have undermined the need for a race-conscious policy, he wrote.

But for now, the status quo survives. At elite universities, students from the richest quarter of the population outnumber those from the poorest quarter by twenty-four to one, new research shows. A different decision from the Supreme Court in Fisher II might have pushed universities to recruit more low-income students as a better form of affirmative action to indirectly achieve racial diversity. The result would have been a vibrant level of racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic diversity. Now, instead, universities are more likely to return to what they have been doing all along: using race to determine, as Walter Benn Michaels put it, what color skin the rich kids have.

Wealthy students of all races have won and low-income students of all races have lost. Maybe this ultimate result should not have been so surprising after all.

Cases: Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin

Recommended Citation: Richard Kahlenberg, Symposium: A win for wealthy students, SCOTUSblog (Jun. 24, 2016, 12:00 AM), https://www.scotusblog.com/2016/06/symposium-a-win-for-wealthy-students/