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The Solicitor General's Brief: For diversity and against racism.
National Review Online ^ | January 21, 2003 | Douglas W. Kmiec

Posted on 01/21/2003 7:20:23 AM PST by xsysmgr

It is now well known that the president favors diversity of experience in higher education, even racial experience, but not the mindless or unconstitutional use of race in admissions. What that actually means under the law was left for Solicitor General Theodore Olson to articulate in Supreme Court briefs he filed late Thursday.

He wrote masterfully. The briefs reaffirm that the equal-protection clause of the Constitution outlaws quotas under any circumstances and forbids the government from employing race-based policies when race-neutral ones are available, and frankly, better.

The principled coherence of the solicitor general's argument can be appreciated only if one is able to get over past legalisms. All the courts of appeals, for example, thought the question to be starkly: Is racial diversity a compelling governmental interest? It is more subtle than that, and the brief filed by Mr. Olson tellingly reveals that no matter how one parses it, Bakke doesn't yield an answer. Quite the contrary, Bakke simply invalidated a racial quota, and beyond that, its meaning has hopelessly divided the courts of appeal.

Putting that highly academic legal debate aside, the solicitor general then brings us back to the main issue: When can race be used by a public entity? Answer: Rarely — thus far, in precedent, the Supreme Court has said only when necessary to remedy past discrimination and then only by narrowly tailored means. Next, Olson asks, does this help us resolve the case at hand? Answer: Yes, because the University of Michigan has used race so casually and so dispositively, that its practice cannot possibly fit within those rare exceptions allowed by the Constitution.

This is where most of us on the conservative side of the ledger would have wanted to end the discussion, but in an insightful move, the solicitor general doesn't abbreviate his argument. Rather, he comes to grips with both the political and legal reality. Politically, diversity is, and is perceived to be, an educational good. Legally, few doubt that racism still exists, whether subtle or not, and it affects the lives of those who encounter it. This is why it was essential for the solicitor general, in denying new forms of racism, not to be insensitive to race. He wasn't. In recognizing that meaningful experiential diversity (even that reflecting racial experience) ought to be part of the educational setting, the solicitor general became a better steward of higher-educational policy than the president of the University of Michigan.

In short, Ted Olson has made it legally tenable to be both for diversity and against racism. The battle cry before his brief was that diversity shouldn't matter; after the brief, the proposition was far more nuanced and far more congenial to the aims of higher education: Diversity as a matter of law cannot justify racial discrimination because ample race-neutral means exist to yield diversity.

How did we come to this happy end? The stories are rife about the influence of the president and his White House advisers. Political intervention, historically, has not always gone well for legal argument. Indeed, the tale of the Carter White House's aggressive rewriting of the Bakke brief is an often recounted low point in Justice Department folklore. Normally, politics intercedes, and the result is a diminution of principle or precedent. This is one of those rare cases where the politics actually yielded a superior outcome. Here, the political reality that racism still exists and that genuine diversity of experience can be valuable in the classroom fostered within the solicitor general's briefing a refreshing honesty about both — without in any way giving up the core principle that public decisions based upon race are anathema. Perhaps, it was the political discussion — or at least having to explain his thinking to a non-lawyer president — that allowed the solicitor general to leap over the puzzles of whether Justice Powell spoke for the Court in Bakke, and what was he trying to say. Such is beside the point given the deeply flawed nature of Michigan's program which does not promote genuine diversity of experience or viewpoint at all, but indulges the pernicious viewpoint that everyone of a given race thinks in a given way.

The political debate allowed the solicitor general's work to navigate a conservative base that was too quick to deny the significance of diversity for education, a liberal constituency that was too quick to employ an overt or covert quota system and label its mechanical outcomes as diversity, and, in the end, to arrive at the destination of equal justice under law. Even though the Wolverine was pressing at the door for illicit and unconstitutional preferences, the president and his lawyers illustrated how a genuine commitment to race-neutral inclusion is not only possible, but right.

— Douglas W. Kmiec is dean and St. Thomas More Professor of Law at the Catholic University of America, former assistant attorney general, and senior policy fellow at Pepperdine University.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: affirmativeaction; tedolson
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To: hchutch
Ping my butt. This is the same guy who argued that censure, instead of impeachment, was constitutional. Robert Bork, among others, argued that was preposterous -- and was and is. Doug's a good guy, but he's trying way too hard to be nominated to the federal bench. I urge everyone to read these briefs themselves. Even Doug Kmiec makes a suddened turn from the law to "political" reality -- as he sees it. I know Ted Olson very well, and I know he wasn't happy about this. So pong, not ping ...
21 posted on 01/21/2003 9:09:28 AM PST by holdonnow
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To: hchutch
As I said a few days back, when the less-than-sane were crying "CAVED!", this was a solid move by the Bush team.

The president took his case to the people, and Ted Olson avoided the obvious pitfalls of arguing the global principle (which may have actually hurt the case) and narrowed his argument to the case in front of the Court.

Brilliant.

They've taken yet one more bullet out of the Dems guns.
22 posted on 01/21/2003 9:11:22 AM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Ever So Humble Banana Republican)
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To: St. Clair Slim
Yappin', clappin', mixin' and matchin'. That's strong.

Bingo. And that is strong.

Brrrrrrrrrr! Now go to class. ;-)

Birth of Tha SYNDICATE, the philosophical heir to William Lloyd Garrison.
101 things that the Mozilla browser can do that Internet Explorer cannot.

23 posted on 01/21/2003 9:28:54 AM PST by rdb3 (mhking keeps it diplomatic. I slide "G" when necessary. (Brrrrrrrrr!) What happened to that boy?)
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To: holdonnow
I don't like the whole idea of racial-preference policies. That said, having looked over the briefs, in this case, an aggressive posture was not the right call. I've read the briefs, and I've looked over the facts of that case.

The fact is, what is important is getting this policy overturned. It sets the precedent that race cannot be the primary factor (and anyone who sees that 20 points for being of a certain ethnicity as compared to 12 points for a perfect SAT score is going to admit that something is way off) used in admissions. We don't have any more chances after SCOTUS. To use the football metaphor, it's fourth down. No more chances after that. If we don't move the chains, we turn it over and that's it.

We have a CHANCE to get the whole enchilada, but if we don't pull it off, we're in a deep hole. We have, in my opinion, a certainty of moving the chains, and getting another set of downs, allowing us to remain on offense on this issue.

At this point, I'd rather move the chains, get that set of downs, and stay on offense.
24 posted on 01/21/2003 9:36:40 AM PST by hchutch ("Last suckers crossed, Syndicate shot'em up" - Ice-T, "I'm Your Pusher")
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To: holdonnow
Then Olson is a gutless coward if he so hated the thought of signing his name to that brief, but did so anyway.

Does he love his job more than the Constitution?
25 posted on 01/21/2003 9:39:59 AM PST by GraniteStateConservative
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To: All
Jan. 21
— WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court said on Tuesday it scheduled arguments on April 1 in two politically charged cases challenging the University of Michigan's affirmative action policies that favor minority applicants.

In the newly released calendar for late March and early April, the justices will hear one hour of arguments in the case on undergraduate admissions and one hour of arguments in the other case on law school admissions.
26 posted on 01/21/2003 9:42:16 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: hchutch
I don't agree with your point, but you've stated it well.
27 posted on 01/21/2003 1:28:33 PM PST by holdonnow
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To: hchutch
"When I began entering into the give and take of legislative bargaining in Sacramento, a lot of the most radical conservatives who had supported me during the election didn't like it. "Compromise" was a dirty word to them and they wouldn't face the fact that we couldn't get all of what we wanted today. They wanted all or nothing and they wanted it all at once. If you don't get it all, some said, don't take anything. "I'd learned while negotiating union contracts that you seldom got everything you asked for. And I agreed with FDR, who said in 1933: 'I have no expectations of making a hit every time I come to bat. What I seek is the highest possible batting average.'

"If you got seventy-five or eighty percent of what you were asking for, I say, you take it and fight for the rest later, and that's what I told these radical conservatives who never got used to it.

~~ Ronald Reagan, in his autobiography, An American Life

28 posted on 01/21/2003 2:12:00 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Ever So Humble Banana Republican)
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To: holdonnow
Did Reagan state it better?
29 posted on 01/21/2003 2:12:39 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Ever So Humble Banana Republican)
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To: holdonnow
Ping my butt... So pong, not ping ...
I'm glad you enjoyed this one so much. (Too much information, though).
30 posted on 01/21/2003 9:22:36 PM PST by nicollo
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To: Howlin
Did you see this?
31 posted on 01/22/2003 8:10:32 PM PST by nicollo
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To: nicollo
I did read it earlier in the day.

Yet more "misinformation" being spread on this site.

32 posted on 01/22/2003 8:42:54 PM PST by Howlin (Well, a girl can dream, can't she???)
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To: Luis Gonzalez
It would be nice if you were right, and I hope you are.

I don't think so, however.

For the view of the Editors of NR, click

Here

You have freepmail, BTW.

Cheers,

Richard F.

33 posted on 01/25/2003 10:22:07 PM PST by rdf
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