SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 20–1199 and 21–707
_________________
STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS, INC.,
PETITIONER
20–1199
v.
PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD
COLLEGE
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the first circuit
STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS, INC.,
PETITIONER
21–707
v.
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA,
et al.
on writ of certiorari before judgment to the
united states court of appeals for the fourth circuit
[June 29, 2023]
Justice Sotomayor, with whom Justice Kagan and
Justice Jackson join,[
1]*
dissenting.
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment enshrines a guarantee of racial equality. The Court long
ago concluded that this guarantee can be enforced through
race-conscious means in a society that is not, and has never been,
colorblind. In
Brown v
. Board of Education,
347 U.S.
483 (1954), the Court recognized the constitutional necessity
of racially integrated schools in light of the harm inflicted by
segregation and the “importance of education to our democratic
society.”
Id., at 492–495. For 45 years, the Court extended
Brown’s transformative legacy to the context of higher
education, allowing colleges and universities to consider race in a
limited way and for the limited purpose of promoting the important
benefits of racial diversity. This limited use of race has helped
equalize educational opportunities for all students of every race
and background and has improved racial diversity on college
campuses. Although progress has been slow and imperfect,
race-conscious college admissions policies have advanced the
Constitution’s guarantee of equality and have promoted
Brown’s vision of a Nation with more inclusive schools.
Today, this Court stands in the way and rolls
back decades of precedent and momentous progress. It holds that
race can no longer be used in a limited way in college admissions
to achieve such critical benefits. In so holding, the Court cements
a superficial rule of colorblindness as a constitutional principle
in an endemically segregated society where race has always mattered
and continues to matter. The Court subverts the constitutional
guarantee of equal protection by further entrenching racial
inequality in education, the very foundation of our democratic
government and pluralistic society. Because the Court’s opinion is
not grounded in law or fact and contravenes the vision of equality
embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment, I dissent.
I
A
Equal educational opportunity is a
prerequisite to achieving racial equality in our Nation. From its
founding, the United States was a new experiment in a republican
form of government where democratic participation and the capacity
to engage in self-rule were vital. At the same time, American
society was structured around the profitable institution that was
slavery, which the original Constitution protected. The
Constitution initially limited the power of Congress to restrict
the slave trade, Art. I, §9, cl. 1, accorded Southern
States additional electoral power by counting three-fifths of their
enslaved population in apportioning congressional seats, §2,
cl. 3, and gave enslavers the right to retrieve enslaved
people who escaped to free States, Art. IV, §2, cl. 3.
Because a foundational pillar of slavery was the racist notion that
Black people are a subordinate class with intellectual inferiority,
Southern States sought to ensure slavery’s longevity by prohibiting
the education of Black people, whether enslaved or free. See H.
Williams, Self-Taught: African American Education in Slavery and
Freedom 7, 203–213 (2005) (Self-Taught). Thus, from this Nation’s
birth, the freedom to learn was neither colorblind nor equal.
With time, and at the tremendous cost of the
Civil War, abolition came. More than two centuries after the first
African enslaved persons were forcibly brought to our shores,
Congress adopted the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution,
which abolished “slavery” and “involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime.” §1. “Like all great historical
transformations,” emancipation was a movement, “not a single event”
owed to any single individual, institution, or political party. E.
Foner, The Second Founding 21, 51–54 (2019) (The Second
Founding).
The fight for equal educational opportunity,
however, was a key driver. Literacy was an “instrument of
resistance and liberation.” Self-Taught 8. Education “provided the
means to write a pass to freedom” and “to learn of abolitionist
activities.”
Id., at 7. It allowed enslaved Black people “to
disturb the power relations between master and slave,” which “fused
their desire for literacy with their desire for freedom.”
Ibid. Put simply, “[t]he very feeling of inferiority which
slavery forced upon [Black people] fathered an intense desire to
rise out of their condition by means of education.” W. E. B. Du
Bois, Black Reconstruction in America 1860–1880, p. 638
(1935); see J. Anderson, The Education of Blacks in the South
1860–1935, p. 7 (1988). Black Americans thus insisted, in the
words of Frederick Douglass, “that in a country governed by the
people, like ours, education of the youth of all classes is vital
to its welfare, prosperity, and to its existence.” Address to the
People of the United States (1883), in 4 P. Foner, The Life and
Writings of Frederick Douglass 386 (1955). Black people’s yearning
for freedom of thought, and for a more perfect Union with
educational opportunity for all, played a crucial role during the
Reconstruction era.
Yet emancipation marked the beginning, not the
end, of that era. Abolition alone could not repair centuries of
racial subjugation. Following the Thirteenth Amendment’s
ratification, the Southern States replaced slavery with “a system
of ‘laws which imposed upon [Black people] onerous disabilities and
burdens, and curtailed their rights in the pursuit of life,
liberty, and property to such an extent that their freedom was of
little value.’ ”
Regents of Univ. of Cal. v.
Bakke,
438 U.S.
265, 390 (1978) (opinion of Marshall, J.) (quoting
Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36, 70 (1873)). Those
so-called “Black Codes” discriminated against Black people on the
basis of race, regardless of whether they had been previously
enslaved. See,
e.g., 1866 N. C. Sess. Laws pp. 99,
102.
Moreover, the criminal punishment exception in
the Thirteenth Amendment facilitated the creation of a new system
of forced labor in the South. Southern States expanded their
criminal laws, which in turn “permitted involuntary servitude as a
punishment” for convicted Black persons. D. Blackmon, Slavery by
Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans From the Civil
War to World War II, pp. 7, 53 (2009) (Slavery by Another Name).
States required, for example, that Black people “sign a labor
contract to work for a white employer or face prosecution for
vagrancy.” The Second Founding 48. State laws then forced Black
convicted persons to labor in “plantations, mines, and industries
in the South.”
Id., at 50. This system of free forced labor
provided tremendous benefits to Southern whites and was designed to
intimidate, subjugate, and control newly emancipated Black people.
See Slavery by Another Name 5–6, 53
. The Thirteenth
Amendment, without more, failed to equalize society.
Congress thus went further and embarked on
months of deliberation about additional Reconstruction laws. Those
efforts included the appointment of a Committee, the Joint
Committee on Reconstruction, “to inquire into the condition of the
Confederate States.” Report of the Joint Committee on
Reconstruction, S. Rep. No. 112, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 1
(1866) (hereinafter Joint Comm. Rep.). Among other things, the
Committee’s Report to Congress documented the “deep-seated
prejudice” against emancipated Black people in the Southern States
and the lack of a “general disposition to place the colored race,
constituting at least two-fifths of the population, upon terms even
of civil equality.”
Id., at 11. In light of its findings,
the Committee proposed amending the Constitution to secure the
equality of “rights, civil and political.”
Id., at 7.
Congress acted on that recommendation and
adopted the Fourteenth Amendment. Proponents of the Amendment
declared that one of its key goals was to “protec[t] the black man
in his fundamental rights as a citizen with the same shield which
it throws over the white man.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess.,
2766 (1866) (Cong. Globe) (statement of Sen. Howard). That is, the
Amendment sought “to secure to a race recently emancipated, a race
that through many generations [was] held in slavery, all the civil
rights that the superior race enjoy.”
Plessy v.
Ferguson,
163
U.S. 537, 555–556 (1896) (Harlan, J., dissenting) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
To promote this goal, Congress enshrined a broad
guarantee of equality in the Equal Protection Clause of the
Amendment. That Clause commands that “[n]o State shall
. . . deny to any person within its jurisdiction the
equal protection of the laws.” Amdt. 14, §1. Congress chose its
words carefully, opting for expansive language that focused on
equal protection and rejecting “proposals that would have made the
Constitution explicitly color-blind.” A. Kull, The Color-Blind
Constitution 69 (1992); see also,
e.g., Cong. Globe 1287
(rejecting proposed language providing that “no State
. . . shall . . . recognize any distinction
between citizens . . . on account of race or color”).
This choice makes it clear that the Fourteenth Amendment does not
impose a blanket ban on race-conscious policies.
Simultaneously with the passage of the
Fourteenth Amendment, Congress enacted a number of race-conscious
laws to fulfill the Amendment’s promise of equality, leaving no
doubt that the Equal Protection Clause permits consideration of
race to achieve its goal. One such law was the Freedmen’s Bureau
Act, enacted in 1865 and then expanded in 1866, which established a
federal agency to provide certain benefits to refugees and newly
emancipated freedmen. See Act of Mar. 3, 1865, ch. 90, 13Stat.
507; Act of July 16, 1866, ch. 200, 14Stat. 173. For the Bureau,
education “was the foundation upon which all efforts to assist the
freedmen rested.” E. Foner, Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished
Revolution 1863–1877, p. 144 (1988). Consistent with that
view, the Bureau provided essential “funding for black education
during Reconstruction.”
Id., at 97.
Black people were the targeted beneficiaries of
the Bureau’s programs, especially when it came to investments in
education in the wake of the Civil War. Each year surrounding the
passage of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Bureau “educated
approximately 100,000 students, nearly all of them black,” and
regardless of “degree of past disadvantage.” E. Schnapper,
Affirmative Action and the Legislative History of the Fourteenth
Amendment, 71 Va. L. Rev. 753, 781 (1985). The Bureau also
provided land and funding to establish some of our Nation’s
Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).
Ibid.;
see also Brief for HBCU Leaders et al. as
Amici Curiae 13
(HBCU Brief ). In 1867, for example, the Bureau provided
Howard University tens of thousands of dollars to buy property and
construct its campus in our Nation’s capital. 2 O. Howard,
Autobiography 397–401 (1907). Howard University was designed to
provide “special opportunities for a higher education to the newly
enfranchised of the south,” but it was available to all Black
people, “whatever may have been their previous condition.” Bureau
Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, Sixth Semi-Annual Report on
Schools for Freedmen 60 (July 1, 1868).[
2] The Bureau also “expended a total of $407,752.21 on
black colleges, and only $3,000 on white colleges” from 1867 to
1870. Schnapper, 71 Va. L. Rev., at 798, n. 149.
Indeed, contemporaries understood that the
Freedmen’s Bureau Act benefited Black people. Supporters defended
the law by stressing its race-conscious approach. See,
e.g.,
Cong. Globe 632 (statement of Rep. Moulton) (“[T]he true object of
this bill is the amelioration of the condition of the colored
people”); Joint Comm. Rep. 11 (reporting that “the Union men of the
south” declared “with one voice” that the Bureau’s efforts
“protect[ed] the colored people”). Opponents argued that the Act
created harmful racial classifications that favored Black people
and disfavored white Americans. See,
e.g., Cong. Globe 397
(statement of Sen. Willey) (the Act makes “a distinction on account
of color between the two races”), 544 (statement of Rep. Taylor)
(the Act is “legislation for a particular class of the blacks to
the exclusion of all whites”), App. to Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st
Sess., 69–70 (statement of Rep. Rousseau) (“You raise a spirit of
antagonism between the black race and the white race in our
country, and the law-abiding will be powerless to control it”).
President Andrew Johnson vetoed the bill on the basis that it
provided benefits “to a particular class of citizens,” 6 Messages
and Papers of the Presidents 1789–1897, p. 425 (J. Richardson
ed. 1897) (Messages & Papers) (A. Johnson to House of Rep. July
16, 1866), but Congress overrode his veto. Cong. Globe 3849–3850.
Thus, rejecting those opponents’ objections, the same
Reconstruction Congress that passed the Fourteenth Amendment
eschewed the concept of colorblindness as sufficient to remedy
inequality in education.
Congress also debated and passed the Civil
Rights Act of 1866 contemporaneously with the Fourteenth Amendment.
The goal of that Act was to eradicate the Black Codes enacted by
Southern States following ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment.
See
id., at 474. Because the Black Codes focused on race,
not just slavery-related status, the Civil Rights Act explicitly
recognized that white citizens enjoyed certain rights that
non-white citizens did not. Section 1 of the Act provided that all
persons “of every race and color . . . shall have the
same right[s]” as those “enjoyed by white citizens.” Act of Apr. 9,
1866, 14Stat. 27. Similarly, Section 2 established criminal
penalties for subjecting racial minorities to “different punishment
. . . by reason of . . . color or race, than is
prescribed for the punishment of white persons.”
Ibid. In
other words, the Act was not colorblind. By using white citizens as
a benchmark, the law classified by race and took account of the
privileges enjoyed only by white people. As he did with the
Freedmen’s Bureau Act, President Johnson vetoed the Civil Rights
Act in part because he viewed it as providing Black citizens with
special treatment. See Messages and Papers 408, 413 (the Act is
designed “to afford discriminating protection to colored persons,”
and its “distinction of race and color . . . operate[s]
in favor of the colored and against the white race”). Again,
Congress overrode his veto. Cong. Globe 1861. In fact, Congress
reenacted race-conscious language in the Civil Rights Act of 1870,
two years after ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, see Act
of May 31, 1870, §16, 16Stat. 144, where it remains today, see 42
U. S. C. §§1981(a) and 1982 (Rev. Stat. §§1972,
1978).
Congress similarly appropriated federal dollars
explicitly and solely for the benefit of racial minorities. For
example, it appropriated money for “ ‘the relief of destitute
colored women and children,’ ” without regard to prior
enslavement. Act of July 28, 1866, 14Stat. 317. Several times
during and after the passage of the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress
also made special appropriations and adopted special protections
for the bounty and prize money owed to “colored soldiers and
sailors” of the Union Army. 14Stat. 357, Res. No. 46, June 15,
1866; Act of Mar. 3, 1869, ch. 122, 15Stat. 301; Act of Mar. 3,
1873, 17Stat. 528. In doing so, it rebuffed objections to these
measures as “class legislation” “applicable to colored people and
not . . . to the white people.” Cong. Globe, 40th Cong.,
1st Sess., 79 (1867) (statement of Sen. Grimes). This history makes
it “inconceivable” that race-conscious college admissions are
unconstitutional.
Bakke, 438 U. S., at 398 (opinion of
Marshall, J.).[
3]
B
The Reconstruction era marked a
transformational point in the history of American democracy. Its
vision of equal opportunity leading to an equal society “was
short-lived,” however, “with the assistance of this Court.”
Id., at 391. In a series of decisions, the Court “sharply
curtailed” the “substantive protections” of the Reconstruction
Amendments and the Civil Rights Acts.
Id., at 391–392
(collecting cases). That endeavor culminated with the Court’s
shameful decision in
Plessy v.
Ferguson,
163 U.S.
537 (1896), which established that “equality of treatment”
exists “when the races are provided substantially equal facilities,
even though these facilities be separate.”
Brown, 347
U. S., at 488. Therefore, with this Court’s approval,
government-enforced segregation and its concomitant destruction of
equal opportunity became the constitutional norm and infected every
sector of our society, from bathrooms to military units and,
crucially, schools. See
Bakke, 438 U. S., at 393–394
(opinion of Marshall, J.); see also generally R. Rothstein, The
Color of Law 17–176 (2017) (discussing various federal policies
that promoted racial segregation).
In a powerful dissent, Justice Harlan explained
in
Plessy that the Louisiana law at issue, which authorized
segregation in railway carriages, perpetuated a “caste” system. 163
U. S., at 559–560. Although the State argued that the law
“prescribe[d] a rule applicable alike to white and colored
citizens,” all knew that the law’s purpose was not “to exclude
white persons from railroad cars occupied by blacks,” but “to
exclude colored people from coaches occupied by or assigned to
white persons.”
Id., at 557. That is, the law “proceed[ed]
on the ground that colored citizens are so inferior and degraded
that they cannot be allowed to sit in public coaches occupied by
white citizens.”
Id., at 560. Although “[t]he white race
deems itself to be the dominant race . . . in prestige,
in achievements, in education, in wealth, and in power,” Justice
Harlan explained, there is “no superior, dominant, ruling class of
citizens” in the eyes of the law.
Id., at 559. In that
context, Justice Harlan thus announced his view that “[o]ur
constitution is color-blind.”
Ibid.
It was not until half a century later, in
Brown, that the Court honored the guarantee of equality in
the Equal Protection Clause and Justice Harlan’s vision of a
Constitution that “neither knows nor tolerates classes among
citizens.”
Ibid. Considering the “effect[s] of segregation”
and the role of education “in the light of its full development and
its present place in American life throughout the Nation,”
Brown overruled
Plessy. 347 U. S., at 492–495.
The
Brown Court held that “[s]eparate educational facilities
are inherently unequal,” and that such racial segregation deprives
Black students “of the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by
the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Id., at 494–495. The Court thus
ordered segregated schools to transition to a racially integrated
system of public education “with all deliberate speed,” “ordering
the immediate admission of [Black children] to schools previously
attended only by white children.”
Brown v.
Board of
Education,
349 U.S.
294, 301 (1955).
Brown was a race-conscious decision that
emphasized the importance of education in our society. Central to
the Court’s holding was the recognition that, as Justice Harlan
emphasized in
Plessy, segregation perpetuates a caste system
wherein Black children receive inferior educational opportunities
“solely because of their race,” denoting “inferiority as to their
status in the community.” 347 U. S., at 494, and n. 10.
Moreover, because education is “the very foundation of good
citizenship,” segregation in public education harms “our democratic
society” more broadly as well.
Id., at 493. In light of the
harmful effects of entrenched racial subordination on racial
minorities and American democracy,
Brown recognized the
constitutional necessity of a racially integrated system of schools
where education is “available to all on equal terms.”
Ibid.
The desegregation cases that followed
Brown confirm that the ultimate goal of that seminal
decision was to achieve a system of integrated schools that ensured
racial equality of opportunity, not to impose a formalistic rule of
race-blindness. In
Green v.
School Bd. of New Kent
Cty.,
391 U.S.
430 (1968), for example, the Court held that the New Kent
County School Board’s “freedom of choice” plan, which allegedly
allowed “every student, regardless of race, . . .
‘freely’ [to] choose the school he [would] attend,” was
insufficient to effectuate “the command of [
Brown].”
Id., at 437, 441–442. That command, the Court explained, was
that schools dismantle “well-entrenched dual systems” and
transition “to a unitary, nonracial system of public education.”
Id., at 435–436. That the board “opened the doors of the
former ‘white’ school to [Black] children and the [‘Black’] school
to white children” on a race-blind basis was not enough.
Id., at 437. Passively eliminating race classifications did
not suffice when
de facto segregation persisted.
Id.,
at 440–442 (noting that 85% of Black children in the school system
were still attending an all-Black school). Instead, the board was
“clearly charged with the affirmative duty to take whatever steps
might be necessary to convert to a unitary system in which racial
discrimination would be eliminated root and branch.”
Id., at
437–438. Affirmative steps, this Court held, are constitutionally
necessary when mere formal neutrality cannot achieve
Brown’s
promise of racial equality. See
Green, 391
U. S
., at 440–442; see also
North Carolina Bd. of
Ed. v
. Swann,
402 U.S.
43, 45–46 (1971) (holding that North Carolina statute that
forbade the use of race in school busing “exploits an apparently
neutral form to control school assignment plans by directing that
they be ‘colorblind’; that requirement, against the background of
segregation, would render illusory the promise of
Brown”);
Dayton Bd. of Ed. v.
Brinkman,
443 U.S.
526, 538 (1979) (school board “had to do more than abandon its
prior discriminatory purpose”; it “had an affirmative
responsibility” to integrate);
Keyes v.
School Dist. No.
1, Denver,
413 U.S.
189, 200 (1973) (“[T]he State automatically assumes an
affirmative duty” under
Brown to eliminate the vestiges of
segregation).[
4]
In so holding, this Court’s post-
Brown
decisions rejected arguments advanced by opponents of integration
suggesting that “restor[ing] race as a criterion in the operation
of the public schools” was at odds with “the
Brown
decisions.” Brief for Respondents in
Green v.
School Bd.
of New Kent Cty., O. T. 1967, No. 695, p. 6 (
Green
Brief ). Those opponents argued that
Brown only
required the admission of Black students “to public schools on a
racially nondiscriminatory basis.”
Id., at 11 (emphasis
deleted). Relying on Justice Harlan’s dissent in
Plessy,
they argued that the use of race “is improper” because the
“ ‘Constitution is colorblind.’ ”
Green Brief 6,
n. 6 (quoting
Plessy, 163 U. S., at 559 (Harlan,
J., dissenting)). They also incorrectly claimed that their views
aligned with those of the
Brown litigators, arguing that the
Brown plaintiffs “understood” that
Brown’s “mandate”
was colorblindness.
Green Brief 17. This Court rejected that
characterization of “the thrust of
Brown.”
Green, 391
U. S., at 437. It made clear that indifference to race “is not
an end in itself ” under that watershed decision.
Id.,
at 440. The ultimate goal is racial equality of opportunity.
Those rejected arguments mirror the Court’s
opinion today. The Court claims that
Brown requires that
students be admitted “ ‘on a racially nondiscriminatory
basis.’ ”
Ante, at 13. It distorts the dissent in
Plessy to advance a colorblindness theory.
Ante, at
38–39; see also
ante, at 22 (Gorsuch, J., concurring)
(“[T]oday’s decision wakes the echoes of Justice John Marshall
Harlan [in
Plessy]”);
ante, at 3 (Thomas, J.,
concurring) (same). The Court also invokes the
Brown
litigators, relying on what the
Brown “plaintiffs had
argued.”
Ante, at 12;
ante, at 35–36, 39, n. 7
(opinion of Thomas, J.).
If there was a Member of this Court who
understood the
Brown litigation, it was Justice Thurgood
Marshall, who “led the litigation campaign” to dismantle
segregation as a civil rights lawyer and “rejected the hollow,
race-ignorant conception of equal protection” endorsed by the
Court’s ruling today. Brief for NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, Inc., et al. as
Amici Curiae 9. Justice Marshall
joined the
Bakke plurality and “applaud[ed] the judgment of
the Court that a university may consider race in its admissions
process.” 438 U. S., at 400. In fact, Justice Marshall’s view
was that
Bakke’s holding should have been even more
protective of race-conscious college admissions programs in light
of the remedial purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment and the legacy
of racial inequality in our society. See
id., at 396–402
(arguing that “a class-based remedy” should be constitutionally
permissible in light of the hundreds of “years of class-based
discrimination against [Black Americans]”). The Court’s
recharacterization of
Brown is nothing but revisionist
history and an affront to the legendary life of Justice Marshall, a
great jurist who was a champion of true equal opportunity, not
rhetorical flourishes about colorblindness.
C
Two decades after
Brown, in
Bakke, a plurality of the Court held that “the attainment of
a diverse student body” is a “compelling” and “constitutionally
permissible goal for an institution of higher education.” 438
U. S., at 311–315. Race could be considered in the college
admissions process in pursuit of this goal, the plurality
explained, if it is one factor of many in an applicant’s file, and
each applicant receives individualized review as part of a holistic
admissions process.
Id., at 316–318.
Since
Bakke, the Court has reaffirmed
numerous times the constitutionality of limited race-conscious
college admissions. First, in
Grutter v.
Bollinger,
539 U.S.
306 (2003), a majority of the Court endorsed the
Bakke
plurality’s “view that student body diversity is a compelling state
interest that can justify the use of race in university
admissions,” 539 U. S., at 325, and held that race may be used
in a narrowly tailored manner to achieve this interest,
id.,
at 333–344; see also
Gratz v.
Bollinger,
539 U.S.
244, 268 (2003) (“for the reasons set forth [the same day] in
Grutter,” rejecting petitioners’ arguments that race can
only be considered in college admissions “to remedy identified
discrimination” and that diversity is “ ‘too open-ended,
ill-defined, and indefinite to constitute a compelling
interest’ ”).
Later, in the
Fisher litigation, the
Court twice reaffirmed that a limited use of race in college
admissions is constitutionally permissible if it satisfies strict
scrutiny. In
Fisher v.
University of Texas at Austin,
570 U.S.
297 (2013) (
Fisher I), seven Members of the Court
concluded that the use of race in college admissions comports with
the Fourteenth Amendment if it “is narrowly tailored to obtain the
educational benefits of diversity.”
Id., at 314, 337.
Several years later, in
Fisher v.
University of Texas at
Austin, 579 U.S. 365, 376 (2016) (
Fisher II), the Court
upheld the admissions program at the University of Texas under this
framework.
Id., at 380–388.
Bakke,
Grutter, and
Fisher
are an extension of
Brown’s legacy. Those decisions
recognize that “ ‘experience lend[s] support to the view that
the contribution of diversity is substantial.’ ”
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 324 (quoting
Bakke, 438
U. S., at 313). Racially integrated schools improve
cross-racial understanding, “break down racial stereotypes,” and
ensure that students obtain “the skills needed in today’s
increasingly global marketplace . . . through exposure to
widely diverse people, cultures, ideas, and viewpoints.” 539
U. S., at 330. More broadly, inclusive institutions that are
“visibly open to talented and qualified individuals of every race
and ethnicity” instill public confidence in the “legitimacy” and
“integrity” of those institutions and the diverse set of graduates
that they cultivate.
Id., at 332. That is particularly true
in the context of higher education, where colleges and universities
play a critical role in “maintaining the fabric of society” and
serve as “the training ground for a large number of our Nation’s
leaders.”
Id., at 331–332. It is thus an objective of the
highest order, a “compelling interest” indeed, that universities
pursue the benefits of racial diversity and ensure that “the
diffusion of knowledge and opportunity” is available to students of
all races.
Id., at 328–333.
This compelling interest in student body
diversity is grounded not only in the Court’s equal protection
jurisprudence but also in principles of “academic freedom,” which
“ ‘long [have] been viewed as a special concern of the First
Amendment.’ ”
Id., at 324 (quoting
Bakke, 438
U. S., at 312). In light of “the important purpose of public
education and the expansive freedoms of speech and thought
associated with the university environment,” this Court’s
precedents recognize the imperative nature of diverse student
bodies on American college campuses. 539 U. S., at 329.
Consistent with the First Amendment, student body diversity allows
universities to promote “th[e] robust exchange of ideas which
discovers truth out of a multitude of tongues [rather] than through
any kind of authoritative selection. ”
Bakke, 438
U. S., at 312 (internal quotation marks omitted). Indeed, as
the Court recently reaffirmed in another school case, “learning how
to tolerate diverse expressive activities has always been ‘part of
learning how to live in a pluralistic society’ ” under our
constitutional tradition.
Kennedy v.
Bremerton School
Dist., 597 U. S. ___, ___ (2022) (slip op., at 29); cf.
Khorrami v.
Arizona, 598 U. S. ___, ___ (2022)
(Gorsuch, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari) (slip op., at
8) (collecting research showing that larger juries are more likely
to be racially diverse and “deliberate longer, recall information
better, and pay greater attention to dissenting voices”).
In short, for more than four decades, it has
been this Court’s settled law that the Equal Protection Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment authorizes a limited use of race in
college admissions in service of the educational benefits that flow
from a diverse student body. From
Brown to
Fisher,
this Court’s cases have sought to equalize educational opportunity
in a society structured by racial segregation and to advance the
Fourteenth Amendment’s vision of an America where racially
integrated schools guarantee students of all races the equal
protection of the laws.
D
Today, the Court concludes that indifference
to race is the only constitutionally permissible means to achieve
racial equality in college admissions. That interpretation of the
Fourteenth Amendment is not only contrary to precedent and the
entire teachings of our history, see
supra, at 2–17, but is
also grounded in the illusion that racial inequality was a problem
of a different generation. Entrenched racial inequality remains a
reality today. That is true for society writ large and, more
specifically, for Harvard and the University of North Carolina
(UNC), two institutions with a long history of racial exclusion.
Ignoring race will not equalize a society that is racially unequal.
What was true in the 1860s, and again in 1954, is true today:
Equality requires acknowledgment of inequality.
1
After more than a century of government
policies enforcing racial segregation by law, society remains
highly segregated. About half of all Latino and Black students
attend a racially homogeneous school with at least 75% minority
student enrollment.[
5] The
share of intensely segregated minority schools (
i.e.,
schools that enroll 90% to 100% racial minorities) has sharply
increased.[
6] To this day, the
U. S. Department of Justice continues to enter into
desegregation decrees with schools that have failed to “eliminat[e]
the vestiges of
de jure segregation.” [
7]
Moreover, underrepresented minority students are
more likely to live in poverty and attend schools with a high
concentration of poverty.[
8]
When combined with residential segregation and school funding
systems that rely heavily on local property taxes, this leads to
racial minority students attending schools with fewer resources.
See
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v
.
Rodriguez,
411 U.S.
1, 72–86 (1973) (Marshall, J., dissenting) (noting school
funding disparities that result from local property
taxation).[
9] In turn,
underrepresented minorities are more likely to attend schools with
less qualified teachers, less challenging curricula, lower
standardized test scores, and fewer extracurricular activities and
advanced placement courses.[
10] It is thus unsurprising that there are achievement
gaps along racial lines, even after controlling for income
differences.[
11]
Systemic inequities disadvantaging
underrepresented racial minorities exist beyond school resources.
Students of color, particularly Black students, are
disproportionately disciplined or suspended, interrupting their
academic progress and increasing their risk of involvement with the
criminal justice system.[
12]
Underrepresented minorities are less likely to have parents with a
postsecondary education who may be familiar with the college
application process.[
13]
Further, low-income children of color are less likely to attend
preschool and other early childhood education programs that
increase educational attainment.[
14] All of these interlocked factors place
underrepresented minorities multiple steps behind the starting line
in the race for college admissions.
In North Carolina, the home of UNC, racial
inequality is deeply entrenched in K–12 education. State courts
have consistently found that the State does not provide
underrepresented racial minorities equal access to educational
opportunities, and that racial disparities in public schooling have
increased in recent years, in violation of the State Constitution.
See,
e.g.,
Hoke Cty. Bd. of Ed. v.
State, 2020
WL 13310241, *6, *13 (N. C. Super. Ct., Jan. 21, 2020);
Hoke Cty. Bd. of Ed. v
. State, 382 N. C. 386,
388–390, 879 S.E.2d 193, 197–198 (2022).
These opportunity gaps “result in fewer students
from underrepresented backgrounds even applying to” college,
particularly elite universities. Brief for Massachusetts Institute
of Technology et al. as
Amici Curiae 32. “Because
talent lives everywhere, but opportunity does not, there are
undoubtedly talented students with great academic potential who
have simply not had the opportunity to attain the traditional
indicia of merit that provide a competitive edge in the admissions
process.” Brief for Harvard Student and Alumni Organizations as
Amici Curiae 16. Consistent with this reality, Latino and
Black students are less likely to enroll in institutions of higher
education than their white peers.[
15]
Given the central role that education plays in
breaking the cycle of racial inequality, these structural barriers
reinforce other forms of inequality in communities of color. See E.
Wilson, Monopolizing Whiteness, 134 Harv. L. Rev. 2382, 2416
(2021) (“[E]ducational opportunities . . . allow for
social mobility, better life outcomes, and the ability to
participate equally in the social and economic life of the
democracy”). Stark racial disparities exist, for example, in
unemployment rates,[
16]
income levels,[
17] wealth
and homeownership,[
18] and
healthcare access.[
19] See
also
Schuette v
. BAMN,
572 U.S.
291, 380–381 (2014) (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (noting the
“persistent racial inequality in society”);
Gratz, 539
U. S., at 299–301 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting) (cataloging
racial disparities in employment, poverty, healthcare, housing,
consumer transactions, and education).
Put simply, society remains “inherently
unequal.”
Brown, 347 U. S., at 495. Racial inequality
runs deep to this very day. That is particularly true in education,
the “ ‘most vital civic institution for the preservation of a
democratic system of government.’ ”
Plyler v
.
Doe,
457 U.S.
202, 221, 223 (1982). As I have explained before, only with
eyes open to this reality can the Court “carry out the guarantee of
equal protection.”
Schuette, 572 U. S., at 381
(dissenting opinion).
2
Both UNC and Harvard have sordid legacies of
racial exclusion. Because “[c]ontext matters” when reviewing
race-conscious college admissions programs,
Grutter, 539
U. S., at 327, this reality informs the exigency of
respondents’ current admissions policies and their racial diversity
goals.
i
For much of its history, UNC was a bastion of
white supremacy. Its leadership included “slaveholders, the leaders
of the Ku Klux Klan, the central figures in the white supremacy
campaigns of 1898 and 1900, and many of the State’s most ardent
defenders of Jim Crow and race-based Social Darwinism in the
twentieth century.” 3 App. 1680. The university excluded all people
of color from its faculty and student body, glorified the
institution of slavery, enforced its own Jim Crow regulations, and
punished any dissent from racial orthodoxy.
Id., at
1681–1683. It resisted racial integration after this Court’s
decision in
Brown, and was forced to integrate by court
order in 1955. 3 App. 1685. It took almost 10 more years for the
first Black woman to enroll at the university in 1963. See Karen L.
Parker Collection, 1963–1966, UNC Wilson Special Collections
Library. Even then, the university admitted only a handful of
underrepresented racial minorities, and those students suffered
constant harassment, humiliation, and isolation. 3 App. 1685. UNC
officials openly resisted racial integration well into the 1980s,
years after the youngest Member of this Court was born.[
20]
Id., at 1688–1690. During
that period, Black students faced racial epithets and stereotypes,
received hate mail, and encountered Ku Klux Klan rallies on campus.
2
id., at 781–784; 3
id., at 1689.
To this day, UNC’s deep-seated legacy of racial
subjugation continues to manifest itself in student life. Buildings
on campus still bear the names of members of the Ku Klux Klan and
other white supremacist leaders.
Id., at 1683. Students of
color also continue to experience racial harassment, isolation, and
tokenism.[
21] Plus, the
student body remains predominantly white: approximately 72% of UNC
students identify as white, while only 8% identify as Black.
Id., at 1647. These numbers do not reflect the diversity of
the State, particularly Black North Carolinians, who make up 22% of
the population.
Id., at 1648.
ii
UNC is not alone. Harvard, like other Ivy
League universities in our country, “stood beside church and state
as the third pillar of a civilization built on bondage.” C. Wilder,
Ebony & Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of
America’s Universities 11 (2013). From Harvard’s founding, slavery
and racial subordination were integral parts of the institution’s
funding, intellectual production, and campus life. Harvard and its
donors had extensive financial ties to, and profited from, the
slave trade, the labor of enslaved people, and slavery-related
investments. As Harvard now recognizes, the accumulation of this
wealth was “vital to the University’s growth” and establishment as
an elite, national institution. Harvard & the Legacy of
Slavery, Report by the President and Fellows of Harvard College 7
(2022) (Harvard Report). Harvard suppressed antislavery views, and
enslaved persons “served Harvard presidents and professors and fed
and cared for Harvard students” on campus.
Id., at 7,
15.
Exclusion and discrimination continued to be a
part of campus life well into the 20th century. Harvard’s
leadership and prominent professors openly promoted “ ‘race
science,’ ” racist eugenics, and other theories rooted in
racial hierarchy.
Id., at 11. Activities to advance these
theories “took place on campus,” including “intrusive physical
examinations” and “photographing of unclothed” students.
Ibid. The university also “prized the admission of
academically able Anglo-Saxon students from elite
backgrounds—including wealthy white sons of the South.”
Id.,
at 44. By contrast, an average of three Black students enrolled at
Harvard each year during the five decades between 1890 and 1940.
Id., at 45. Those Black students who managed to enroll at
Harvard “excelled academically, earning equal or better academic
records than most white students,” but faced the challenges of the
deeply rooted legacy of slavery and racism on campus.
Ibid.
Meanwhile, a few women of color attended Radcliffe College, a
separate and overwhelmingly white “women’s annex” where racial
minorities were denied campus housing and scholarships.
Id.,
at 51. Women of color at Radcliffe were taught by Harvard
professors, but “women did not receive Harvard degrees until 1963.”
Ibid.; see also S. Bradley, Upending the Ivory Tower: Civil
Rights, Black Power, and the Ivy League 17 (2018) (noting that the
historical discussion of racial integration at the Ivy League “is
necessarily male-centric,” given the historical exclusion of women
of color from these institutions).
Today, benefactors with ties to slavery and
white supremacy continue to be memorialized across campus through
“statues, buildings, professorships, student houses, and the like.”
Harvard Report 11. Black and Latino applicants account for only 20%
of domestic applicants to Harvard each year. App. to Pet. for Cert.
in No. 20–1199, p. 112. “Even those students of color who beat
the odds and earn an offer of admission” continue to experience
isolation and alienation on campus. Brief for 25 Harvard Student
and Alumni Organizations as
Amici Curiae 30–31; 2 App. 823,
961. For years, the university has reported that inequities on
campus remain. See,
e.g., 4 App. 1564–1601. For example,
Harvard has reported that “far too many black students at Harvard
experience feelings of isolation and marginalization,” 3
id., at 1308, and that “student survey data show[ed] that
only half of Harvard undergraduates believe that the housing system
fosters exchanges between students of different backgrounds,”
id., at 1309.
* * *
These may be uncomfortable truths to some, but
they are truths nonetheless. “Institutions can and do change,”
however, as societal and legal changes force them “to live up to
[their] highest ideals.” Harvard Report 56. It is against this
historical backdrop that Harvard and UNC have reckoned with their
past and its lingering effects. Acknowledging the reality that race
has always mattered and continues to matter, these universities
have established institutional goals of diversity and inclusion.
Consistent with equal protection principles and this Court’s
settled law, their policies use race in a limited way with the goal
of recruiting, admitting, and enrolling underrepresented racial
minorities to pursue the well-documented benefits of racial
integration in education.
II
The Court today stands in the way of
respondents’ commendable undertaking and entrenches racial
inequality in higher education. The majority opinion does so by
turning a blind eye to these truths and overruling decades of
precedent, “content for now to disguise” its ruling as an
application of “established law and move on.”
Kennedy, 597
U. S., at ___ (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (slip op., at 29).
As Justice Thomas puts it, “
Grutter is, for all intents and
purposes, overruled.”
Ante, at 58.
It is a disturbing feature of today’s decision
that the Court does not even attempt to make the extraordinary
showing required by
stare decisis. The Court simply moves
the goalposts, upsetting settled expectations and throwing
admissions programs nationwide into turmoil. In the end, however,
it is clear why the Court is forced to change the rules of the game
to reach its desired outcome: Under a faithful application of the
Court’s settled legal framework, Harvard and UNC’s admissions
programs are constitutional and comply with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 42 U. S. C. §2000d
et seq.[
22]
A
Answering the question whether Harvard’s and
UNC’s policies survive strict scrutiny under settled law is
straightforward, both because of the procedural posture of these
cases and because of the narrow scope of the issues presented by
petitioner Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. (SFFA).[
23]
These cases arrived at this Court after two
lengthy trials. Harvard and UNC introduced dozens of fact
witnesses, expert testimony, and documentary evidence in support of
their admissions programs. Brief for Petitioner 20, 40. SFFA, by
contrast, did not introduce a single fact witness and relied on the
testimony of two experts.
Ibid.
After making detailed findings of fact and
conclusions of law, the District Courts entered judgment in favor
of Harvard and UNC. See 397 F. Supp. 3d 126, 133–206
(Mass. 2019) (
Harvard I ); 567 F. Supp. 3d
580, 588–667 (MDNC 2021) (
UNC). The First Circuit affirmed
in the
Harvard case, finding “no error” in the District
Court’s thorough opinion. 980 F.3d 157, 204 (2020) (
Harvard
II ). SFFA then filed petitions for a writ of certiorari
in both cases, which the Court granted. 595 U. S. ___
(2022).[
24]
The Court granted certiorari on three questions:
(1) whether the Court should overrule
Bakke,
Grutter,
and
Fisher; or, alternatively, (2) whether UNC’s admissions
program is narrowly tailored, and (3) whether Harvard’s admissions
program is narrowly tailored. See Brief for Petitioner in No.
20–1199, p. i; Brief for Respondent in No. 20–1199, p. i;
Brief for University Respondents in No. 21–707, p. i.
Answering the last two questions, which call for application of
settled law to the facts of these cases, is simple: Deferring to
the lower courts’ careful findings of fact and credibility
determinations, Harvard’s and UNC’s policies are narrowly
tailored.
B
1
As to narrow tailoring, the only issue SFFA
raises in the
UNC case is that the university cannot use
race in its admissions process because race-neutral alternatives
would promote UNC’s diversity objectives. That issue is so easily
resolved in favor of UNC that SFFA devoted only three pages to it
at the end of its 87-page brief. Brief for Petitioner 83–86.
The use of race is narrowly tailored unless
“workable” and “available” race-neutral approaches exist, meaning
race-neutral alternatives promote the institution’s diversity goals
and do so at “ ‘tolerable administrative expense.’ ”
Fisher I, 570 U. S., at 312 (quoting
Wygant v.
Jackson Bd. of Ed.,
476 U.S.
267, 280, n. 6 (1986) (plurality opinion)). Narrow
tailoring does not mean perfect tailoring. The Court’s precedents
make clear that “[n]arrow tailoring does not require exhaustion of
every conceivable race-neutral alternative.”
Grutter, 539
U. S., at 339. “Nor does it require a university to choose
between maintaining a reputation for excellence or fulfilling a
commitment to provide educational opportunities to members of all
racial groups.”
Ibid.
As the District Court found after considering
extensive expert testimony, SFFA’s proposed race-neutral
alternatives do not meet those criteria.
UNC, 567
F. Supp. 3d, at 648. All of SFFA’s proposals are
methodologically flawed because they rest on “ ‘terribly
unrealistic’ ” assumptions about the applicant pools.
Id., at 643–645, 647. For example, as to one set of
proposals, SFFA’s expert “unrealistically assumed” that “all of the
top students in the candidate pools he use[d] would apply, be
admitted, and enroll.”
Id., at 647. In addition, some of
SFFA’s proposals force UNC to “abandon its holistic approach” to
college admissions,
id., at 643–645, n. 43, a result
“in deep tension with the goal of educational diversity as this
Court’s cases have defined it,”
Fisher II, 579 U. S.,
at 386–387. Others are “largely impractical—not to mention
unprecedented—in higher education.” 567 F. Supp. 3d, at 647.
SFFA’s proposed top percentage plans,[
25] for example, are based on a made-up and complicated
admissions index that requires UNC to “access . . .
real-time data for all high school students.”
Ibid. UNC is
then supposed to use that index, which “would change every time any
student took a standardized test,” to rank students based on grades
and test scores.
Ibid. One of SFFA’s top percentage plans
would even “nearly erase the Native American incoming class” at
UNC.
Id., at 646. The courts below correctly concluded that
UNC is not required to adopt SFFA’s unrealistic proposals to
satisfy strict scrutiny.[
26]
2
Harvard’s admissions program is also narrowly
tailored under settled law. SFFA argues that Harvard’s program is
not narrowly tailored because the university “has workable
race-neutral alternatives,” “does not use race as a mere plus,” and
“engages in racial balancing.” Brief for Petitioner 75–83. As the
First Circuit concluded, there was “no error” in the District
Court’s findings on any of these issues.
Harvard II, 980
F. 3d, at 204.[
27]
Like UNC, Harvard has already implemented many
of SFFA’s proposals, such as increasing recruitment efforts and
financial aid for low-income students.
Id., at 193. Also
like UNC, Harvard “carefully considered” other race-neutral ways to
achieve its diversity goals, but none of them are “workable.”
Id., at 193–194. SFFA’s argument before this Court is that
Harvard should adopt a plan designed by SFFA’s expert for purposes
of trial, which increases preferences for low-income applicants and
eliminates the use of race and legacy preferences.
Id., at
193; Brief for Petitioner 81. Under SFFA’s model, however, Black
representation would plummet by about 32%, and the admitted share
of applicants with high academic ratings would decrease, as would
the share with high extracurricular and athletic ratings. 980
F. 3d, at 194. SFFA’s proposal, echoed by Justice Gorsuch,
ante, at 14–15, requires Harvard to “make sacrifices on
almost every dimension important to its admissions process,” 980
F. 3d, at 194, and forces it “to choose between a diverse
student body and a reputation for academic excellence,”
Fisher
II, 579 U. S., at 385. Neither this Court’s precedents nor
common sense impose that type of burden on colleges and
universities.
The courts below also properly rejected SFFA’s
argument that Harvard does not use race in the limited way this
Court’s precedents allow. The Court has explained that a university
can consider a student’s race in its admissions process so long as
that use is “contextual and does not operate as a mechanical plus
factor.”
Id., at 375. The Court has also repeatedly held
that race, when considered as one factor of many in the context of
holistic review, “can make a difference to whether an application
is accepted or rejected.”
Ibid. After all, race-conscious
admissions seek to improve racial diversity. Race cannot, however,
be “ ‘decisive’ for virtually every minimally qualified
underrepresented minority applicant.”
Gratz, 539 U. S.,
at 272 (quoting
Bakke, 438 U. S., at 317).
That is precisely how Harvard’s program
operates. In recent years, Harvard has received about 35,000
applications for a class with about 1,600 seats. 980 F. 3d, at
165. The admissions process is exceedingly competitive; it involves
six different application components. Those components include
interviews with alumni and admissions officers, as well as
consideration of a whole range of information, such as grades, test
scores, recommendation letters, and personal essays, by several
committees.
Id., at 165–166. Consistent with that
“individualized, holistic review process,” admissions officers may,
but need not, consider a student’s self-reported racial identity
when assigning overall ratings.
Id., at 166, 169, 180. Even
after so many layers of competitive review, Harvard typically ends
up with about 2,000 tentative admits, more students than the 1,600
or so that the university can admit.
Id., at 170. To choose
among those highly qualified candidates, Harvard considers “plus
factors,” which can help “tip an applicant into Harvard’s admitted
class.”
Id., at 170, 191. To diversify its class, Harvard
awards “tips” for a variety of reasons, including geographic
factors, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, and race.
Ibid.
There is “no evidence of any mechanical use of
tips.”
Id., at 180. Consistent with the Court’s precedents,
Harvard properly “considers race as part of a holistic review
process,” “values all types of diversity,” “does not consider race
exclusively,” and “does not award a fixed amount of points to
applicants because of their race.”
Id., at 190.[
28] Indeed, Harvard’s admissions
process is so competitive and the use of race is so limited and
flexible that, as “SFFA’s own expert’s analysis” showed, “Harvard
rejects more than two-thirds of Hispanic applicants and slightly
less than half of all African-American applicants who are among the
top 10% most academically promising applicants.”
Id., at
191.
The courts below correctly rejected SFFA’s view
that Harvard’s use of race is unconstitutional because it impacts
overall Hispanic and Black student representation by 45%. See Brief
for Petitioner 79. That 45% figure shows that eliminating the use
of race in admissions “would reduce African American representation
. . . from 14% to 6% and Hispanic representation from 14%
to 9%.”
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d, at 180, 191. Such impact
of Harvard’s limited use of race on the makeup of the class is less
than this Court has previously upheld as narrowly tailored. In
Grutter, for example, eliminating the use of race would have
reduced the underrepresented minority population by 72%, a much
greater effect. 539 U. S., at 320. And in
Fisher II,
the use of race helped increase Hispanic representation from 11% to
16.9% (a 54% increase) and African-American representation from
3.5% to 6.8% (a 94% increase). 579 U. S., at 384.[
29]
Finally, the courts below correctly concluded
that Harvard complies with this Court’s repeated admonition that
colleges and universities cannot define their diversity interest
“as ‘some specified percentage of a particular group merely because
of its race or ethnic origin.’ ”
Fisher I, 570
U. S., at 311 (quoting
Bakke, 438 U. S., at 307).
Harvard does not specify its diversity objectives in terms of
racial quotas, and “SFFA did not offer expert testimony to support
its racial balancing claim.”
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d, at
180, 186–187. Harvard’s statistical evidence, by contrast, showed
that the admitted classes across racial groups varied considerably
year to year, a pattern “inconsistent with the imposition of a
racial quota or racial balancing.”
Harvard I, 397
F. Supp. 3d, at 176–177; see
Harvard II, 980
F. 3d, at 180, 188–189.
Similarly, Harvard’s use of “one-pagers”
containing “a snapshot of various demographic characteristics of
Harvard’s applicant pool” during the admissions review process is
perfectly consistent with this Court’s precedents.
Id., at
170–171, 189. Consultation of these reports, with no “specific
number firmly in mind,” “does not transform [Harvard’s] program
into a quota.”
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 335–336. Rather,
Harvard’s ongoing review complies with the Court’s command that
universities periodically review the necessity of the use of race
in their admissions programs.
Id., at 342;
Fisher II,
579 U. S., at 388.
The Court ignores these careful findings and
concludes that Harvard engages in racial balancing because its
“focus on numbers is obvious.”
Ante, at 31. Because SFFA
failed to offer an expert and to prove its claim below, the
majority is forced to reconstruct the record and conduct its own
factual analysis. It thus relies on a single chart from SFFA’s
brief that truncates relevant data in the record. Compare
ibid. (citing Brief for Petitioner in No. 20–1199,
p. 23) with 4 App. in No. 20–1199, p. 1770. That chart
cannot displace the careful factfinding by the District Court,
which the First Circuit upheld on appeal under clear error review.
See
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d, at 180–182, 188–189.
In any event, the chart is misleading and
ignores “the broader context” of the underlying data that it
purports to summarize.
Id., at 188. As the First Circuit
concluded, what the data actually show is that admissions have
increased for all racial minorities, including Asian American
students, whose admissions numbers have “increased roughly
five-fold since 1980 and roughly two-fold since 1990.”
Id.,
at 180, 188. The data also show that the racial shares of admitted
applicants fluctuate more than the corresponding racial shares of
total applicants, which is “the opposite of what one would expect
if Harvard imposed a quota.”
Id., at 188. Even looking at
the Court’s truncated period for the classes of 2009 to 2018, “the
same pattern holds.”
Ibid. The fact that Harvard’s racial
shares of admitted applicants “varies relatively little in absolute
terms for [those classes] is unsurprising and reflects the fact
that the racial makeup of Harvard’s applicant pool also varies very
little over this period.”
Id., at 188–189. Thus, properly
understood, the data show that Harvard “does not utilize quotas and
does not engage in racial balancing.”
Id., at 189.[
30]
III
The Court concludes that Harvard’s and UNC’s
policies are unconstitutional because they serve objectives that
are insufficiently measurable, employ racial categories that are
imprecise and overbroad, rely on racial stereotypes and
disadvantage nonminority groups, and do not have an end point.
Ante, at 21–34, 39. In reaching this conclusion, the Court
claims those supposed issues with respondents’ programs render the
programs insufficiently “narrow” under the strict scrutiny
framework that the Court’s precedents command.
Ante, at
22
. In reality, however, “the Court today cuts through the
kudzu” and overrules its “higher-education precedents” following
Bakke. Ante, at 22 (Gorsuch, J., concurring).
There is no better evidence that the Court is
overruling the Court’s precedents than those precedents themselves.
“Every one of the arguments made by the majority can be found in
the dissenting opinions filed in [the] cases” the majority now
overrules.
Payne v.
Tennessee,
501 U.S.
808, 846 (1991) (Marshall, J., dissenting); see,
e.g.,
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 354 (Thomas, J., concurring in
part and dissenting in part) (“Unlike the majority, I seek to
define with precision the interest being asserted”);
Fisher
II, 579 U. S., at 389 (Thomas, J., dissenting)
(race-conscious admissions programs “res[t] on pernicious
assumptions about race”);
id., at 403 (Alito, J., joined by
Roberts, C. J., and Thomas, J., dissenting) (diversity
interests “are laudable goals, but they are not concrete or
precise”);
id., at 413 (race-conscious college admissions
plan “discriminates against Asian-American students”);
id.,
at 414 (race-conscious admissions plan is unconstitutional because
it “does not specify what it means to be ‘African-American,’
‘Hispanic,’ ‘Asian American,’ ‘Native American,’ or
‘White’ ”);
id., at 419 (race-conscious college
admissions policies rest on “pernicious stereotype[s]”).
Lost arguments are not grounds to overrule a
case. When proponents of those arguments, greater now in number on
the Court, return to fight old battles anew, it betrays an
unrestrained disregard for precedent. It fosters the People’s
suspicions that “bedrock principles are founded . . . in
the proclivities of individuals” on this Court, not in the law, and
it degrades “the integrity of our constitutional system of
government.”
Vasquez v.
Hillery,
474 U.S.
254, 265 (1986). Nowhere is the damage greater than in cases
like these that touch upon matters of representation and
institutional legitimacy.
The Court offers no justification, much less “a
‘special justification,’ ” for its costly endeavor.
Dobbs v.
Jackson Women’s Health Organization, 597
U. S. ___, ___ (2022) (joint opinion of Breyer, Sotomayor, and
Kagan, JJ., dissenting) (slip op., at 31) (quoting
Gamble v.
United States, 587 U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (slip op., at
11)). Nor could it. There is no basis for overruling
Bakke,
Grutter, and
Fisher. The Court’s precedents were
correctly decided, the opinion today is not workable and creates
serious equal protection problems, important reliance interests
favor respondents, and there are no legal or factual developments
favoring the Court’s reckless course. See 597 U. S., at ___
(joint opinion of Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan, JJ., dissenting)
(slip op., at 31);
id., at ___–___ (Kavanaugh, J.,
concurring) (slip op., at 6–7). At bottom, the six unelected
members of today’s majority upend the status quo based on their
policy preferences about what race in America should be like, but
is not, and their preferences for a veneer of colorblindness in a
society where race has always mattered and continues to matter in
fact and in law.
A
1
A limited use of race in college admissions is
consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment and this Court’s broader
equal protection jurisprudence. The text and history of the
Fourteenth Amendment make clear that the Equal Protection Clause
permits race-conscious measures. See
supra, at 2–9.
Consistent with that view, the Court has explicitly held that
“race-based action” is sometimes “within constitutional
constraints.”
Adarand Constructors,
Inc. v.
Peña,
515 U.S.
200, 237 (1995). The Court has thus upheld the use of race in a
variety of contexts. See,
e.g.,
Parents Involved in
Community Schools v.
Seattle School Dist. No. 1,
551 U.S.
701, 737 (2007) (“[T]he obligation to disestablish a school
system segregated by law can include race-conscious
remedies—whether or not a court had issued an order to that
effect”);
Johnson v.
California,
543 U.S.
499, 512 (2005) (use of race permissible to further prison’s
interest in “ ‘security’ ” and
“ ‘discipline’ ”);
Cooper v.
Harris, 581
U.S. 285, 291–293 (2017) (use of race permissible when drawing
voting districts in some circumstances).[
31]
Tellingly, in sharp contrast with today’s
decision, the Court has allowed the use of race when that use
burdens minority populations. In
United States v.
Brignoni-Ponce,
422 U.S.
873 (1975), for example, the Court held that it is
unconstitutional for border patrol agents to rely on a person’s
skin color as “a single factor” to justify a traffic stop based on
reasonable suspicion, but it remarked that “Mexican appearance”
could be “a relevant factor” out of many to justify such a stop “at
the border and its functional equivalents.”
Id., at 884–887;
see also
id., at 882 (recognizing that “the border” includes
entire metropolitan areas such as San Diego, El Paso, and the South
Texas Rio Grande Valley).[
32] The Court thus facilitated racial profiling of
Latinos as a law enforcement tool and did not adopt a race-blind
rule. The Court later extended this reasoning to border patrol
agents selectively referring motorists for secondary inspection at
a checkpoint, concluding that “even if it be assumed that such
referrals are made largely on the basis of apparent Mexican
ancestry, [there is] no constitutional violation.”
United
States v
. Martinez-Fuerte,
428 U.S.
543, 562–563 (1976) (footnote omitted).
The result of today’s decision is that a
person’s skin color may play a role in assessing individualized
suspicion, but it cannot play a role in assessing that person’s
individualized contributions to a diverse learning environment.
That indefensible reading of the Constitution is not grounded in
law and subverts the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal
protection.
2
The majority does not dispute that some uses
of race are constitutionally permissible. See
ante, at 15.
Indeed, it agrees that a limited use of race is permissible in some
college admissions programs. In a footnote, the Court exempts
military academies from its ruling in light of “the potentially
distinct interests” they may present.
Ante, at 22,
n. 4
. To the extent the Court suggests national
security interests are “distinct,” those interests cannot explain
the Court’s narrow exemption, as national security interests are
also implicated at civilian universities. See
infra, at
64–65. The Court also attempts to justify its carveout based on the
fact that “[n]o military academy is a party to these cases.”
Ante, at 22, n. 4. Yet the same can be said of many
other institutions that are not parties here, including the
religious universities supporting respondents, which the Court does
not similarly exempt from its sweeping opinion. See Brief for
Georgetown University et al. as
Amici Curiae 18–29
(Georgetown Brief ) (Catholic colleges and universities noting
that they rely on the use of race in their holistic admissions to
further not just their academic goals, but also their religious
missions); see also
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d, at 187,
n. 24 (“[S]chools that consider race are diverse on numerous
dimensions, including in terms of religious affiliation, location,
size, and courses of study offered”). The Court’s carveout only
highlights the arbitrariness of its decision and further proves
that the Fourteenth Amendment does not categorically prohibit the
use of race in college admissions.
The concurring opinions also agree that the
Constitution tolerates some racial classifications. Justice Gorsuch
agrees with the majority’s conclusion that racial classifications
are constitutionally permissible if they advance a compelling
interest in a narrowly tailored way.
Ante, at 23. Justice
Kavanaugh, too, agrees that the Constitution permits the use of
race if it survives strict scrutiny.
Ante, at
2
.[
33] Justice Thomas
offers an “originalist defense of the colorblind Constitution,” but
his historical analysis leads to the inevitable conclusion that the
Constitution is not, in fact, colorblind.
Ante, at 2
.
Like the majority opinion, Justice Thomas agrees that race can be
used to remedy past discrimination and “to equalize treatment
against a concrete baseline of government-imposed inequality.”
Ante, at 18–21. He also argues that race can be used if it
satisfies strict scrutiny more broadly, and he considers compelling
interests those that prevent anarchy, curb violence, and segregate
prisoners.
Ante, at 26. Thus, although Justice Thomas at
times suggests that the Constitution only permits “directly
remedial” measures that benefit “identified victims of
discrimination,”
ante, at 20, he agrees that the
Constitution tolerates a much wider range of race-conscious
measures.
In the end, when the Court speaks of a
“colorblind” Constitution, it cannot really mean it, for it is
faced with a body of law that recognizes that race-conscious
measures are permissible under the Equal Protection Clause.
Instead, what the Court actually lands on is an understanding of
the Constitution that is “colorblind”
sometimes, when the
Court so chooses. Behind those choices lie the Court’s own value
judgments about what type of interests are sufficiently compelling
to justify race-conscious measures.
Overruling decades of precedent, today’s newly
constituted Court singles out the limited use of race in holistic
college admissions. It strikes at the heart of
Bakke,
Grutter, and
Fisher by holding that racial diversity
is an “inescapably imponderable” objective that cannot justify
race-conscious affirmative action,
ante, at 24, even though
respondents’ objectives simply “mirror the ‘compelling interest’
this Court has approved” many times in the past.
Fisher II,
579 U. S., at 382; see,
e.g.,
UNC, 567
F. Supp. 3d, at 598 (“the [university’s admissions
policy] repeatedly cites Supreme Court precedent as
guideposts”).[
34] At bottom,
without any new factual or legal justification, the Court overrides
its longstanding holding that diversity in higher education is of
compelling value.
To avoid public accountability for its choice,
the Court seeks cover behind a unique measurability requirement of
its own creation. None of this Court’s precedents, however,
requires that a compelling interest meet some threshold level of
precision to be deemed sufficiently compelling. In fact, this Court
has recognized as compelling plenty of interests that are equally
or more amorphous, including the “intangible” interest in
preserving “public confidence in judicial integrity,” an interest
that “does not easily reduce to precise definition.”
Williams-Yulee v.
Florida Bar, 575 U.S. 433, 447, 454
(2015) (Roberts, C. J., for the Court); see also,
e.g.,
Ramirez v.
Collier, 595 U. S. ___, ___ (2022)
(Roberts, C. J., for the Court) (slip op., at 18) (“[M]aintaining
solemnity and decorum in the execution chamber” is a “compelling”
interest);
United States v.
Alvarez,
567 U.S.
709, 725 (2012) (plurality opinion) (“[P]rotecting the
integrity of the Medal of Honor” is a “compelling interes[t]”);
Sable Communications of Cal.,
Inc. v.
FCC,
492 U.S.
115, 126 (1989) (“[P]rotecting the physical and psychological
well-being of minors” is a “compelling interest”). Thus, although
the Members of this majority pay lip service to respondents’
“commendable” and “worthy” racial diversity goals,
ante, at
23–24, they make a clear value judgment today: Racial integration
in higher education is not sufficiently important to them. “Today,
the proclivities of individuals rule.”
Dobbs, 597
U. S., at ___ (dissenting opinion) (slip op., at 6).
The majority offers no response to any of this.
Instead, it attacks a straw man, arguing that the Court’s cases
recognize that remedying the effects of “societal discrimination”
does not constitute a compelling interest.
Ante, at 34–35.
Yet as the majority acknowledges, while
Bakke rejected that
interest as insufficiently compelling, it upheld a limited use of
race in college admissions to promote the educational benefits that
flow from diversity. 438 U. S., at 311–315. It is that
narrower interest, which the Court has reaffirmed numerous times
since
Bakke and as recently as 2016 in
Fisher II, see
supra, at 14–15, that the Court overrules today.
B
The Court’s precedents authorizing a limited
use of race in college admissions are not just workable—they have
been working. Lower courts have consistently applied them without
issue, as exemplified by the opinions below and SFFA’s and the
Court’s inability to identify any split of authority. Today, the
Court replaces this settled framework with a set of novel
restraints that create troubling equal protection problems and
share one common purpose: to make it impossible to use race in a
holistic way in college admissions, where it is much needed.
1
The Court argues that Harvard’s and UNC’s
programs must end because they unfairly disadvantage some racial
groups. According to the Court, college admissions are a “zero-sum”
game and respondents’ use of race unfairly “advantages”
underrepresented minority students “at the expense of ” other
students.
Ante, at 27.
That is not the role race plays in holistic
admissions. Consistent with the Court’s precedents, respondents’
holistic review policies consider race in a very limited way. Race
is only one factor out of many. That type of system allows Harvard
and UNC to assemble a diverse class on a multitude of dimensions.
Respondents’ policies allow them to select students with various
unique attributes, including talented athletes, artists,
scientists, and musicians. They also allow respondents to assemble
a class with diverse viewpoints, including students who have
different political ideologies and academic interests, who have
struggled with different types of disabilities, who are from
various socioeconomic backgrounds, who understand different ways of
life in various parts of the country, and—yes—students who
self-identify with various racial backgrounds and who can offer
different perspectives because of that identity.
That type of multidimensional system benefits
all students. In fact, racial groups that are not underrepresented
tend to benefit disproportionately from such a system. Harvard’s
holistic system, for example, provides points to applicants who
qualify as “ALDC,” meaning “athletes, legacy applicants, applicants
on the Dean’s Interest List [primarily relatives of donors], and
children of faculty or staff.”
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d,
at 171 (noting also that “SFFA does not challenge the admission of
this large group”). ALDC applicants are predominantly white: Around
67.8% are white, 11.4% are Asian American, 6% are Black, and 5.6%
are Latino.
Ibid. By contrast, only 40.3% of non-ALDC
applicants are white, 28.3% are Asian American, 11% are Black, and
12.6% are Latino.
Ibid. Although “ALDC applicants make up
less than 5% of applicants to Harvard,” they constitute “around 30%
of the applicants admitted each year.”
Ibid. Similarly,
because of achievement gaps that result from entrenched racial
inequality in K–12 education, see
infra, at 18–21, a heavy
emphasis on grades and standardized test scores disproportionately
disadvantages underrepresented racial minorities. Stated simply,
race is one small piece of a much larger admissions puzzle where
most of the pieces disfavor underrepresented racial minorities.
That is precisely why underrepresented racial minorities remain
underrepresented. The Court’s suggestion that an already
advantaged racial group is “disadvantaged” because of a limited use
of race is a myth.
The majority’s true objection appears to be that
a limited use of race in college admissions does, in fact, achieve
what it is designed to achieve: It helps equalize opportunity and
advances respondents’ objectives by increasing the number of
underrepresented racial minorities on college campuses,
particularly Black and Latino students. This is unacceptable, the
Court says, because racial groups that are not underrepresented
“would be admitted in greater numbers” without these policies.
Ante, at 28. Reduced to its simplest terms, the Court’s
conclusion is that an increase in the representation of racial
minorities at institutions of higher learning that were
historically reserved for white Americans is an unfair and
repugnant outcome that offends the Equal Protection Clause. It
provides a license to discriminate against white Americans, the
Court says, which requires the courts and state actors to
“pic[k ] the right races to benefit.”
Ante, at 38.
Nothing in the Fourteenth Amendment or its
history supports the Court’s shocking proposition, which echoes
arguments made by opponents of Reconstruction-era laws and this
Court’s decision in
Brown.
Supra, at 2–17. In a
society where opportunity is dispensed along racial lines, racial
equality cannot be achieved without making room for
underrepresented groups that for far too long were denied admission
through the force of law, including at Harvard and UNC. Quite the
opposite: A racially integrated vision of society, in which
institutions reflect all sectors of the American public and where
“the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners
[are] able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood,” is
precisely what the Equal Protection Clause commands. Martin Luther
King “I Have a Dream” Speech (Aug. 28, 1963). It is “essential if
the dream of one Nation, indivisible, is to be realized.”
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 332.[
35]
By singling out race, the Court imposes a
special burden on racial minorities for whom race is a crucial
component of their identity. Holistic admissions require “truly
individualized consideration” of the whole person.
Id., at
334. Yet, “by foreclosing racial considerations, colorblindness
denies those who racially self-identify the full expression of
their identity” and treats “racial identity as inferior” among all
“other forms of social identity.” E. Boddie, The Indignities of
Colorblindness, 64 UCLA L. Rev. Discourse, 64, 67 (2016). The
Court’s approach thus turns the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal
protection guarantee on its head and creates an equal protection
problem of its own.
There is no question that minority students will
bear the burden of today’s decision. Students of color testified at
trial that racial self-identification was an important component of
their application because without it they would not be able to
present a full version of themselves. For example, Rimel Mwamba, a
Black UNC alumna, testified that it was “really important” that UNC
see who she is “holistically and how the color of [her] skin and
the texture of [her] hair impacted [her] upbringing.” 2 App. in No.
21–707, p. 1033. Itzel Vasquez-Rodriguez, who identifies as
Mexican-American of Cora descent, testified that her ethnoracial
identity is a “core piece” of who she is and has impacted “every
experience” she has had, such that she could not explain her
“potential contributions to Harvard without any reference” to it. 2
App. in No. 20–1199, at 906, 908. Sally Chen, a Harvard alumna who
identifies as Chinese American, explained that being the child of
Chinese immigrants was “really fundamental to explaining who” she
is.
Id., at 968–969. Thang Diep, a Harvard alumnus,
testified that his Vietnamese identity was “such a big part” of
himself that he needed to discuss it in his application.
Id., at 949. And Sarah Cole, a Black Harvard alumna,
emphasized that “[t]o try to not see [her] race is to try to not
see [her] simply because there is no part of [her] experience, no
part of [her] journey, no part of [her] life that has been
untouched by [her] race.”
Id., at 932.
In a single paragraph at the end of its lengthy
opinion, the Court suggests that “nothing” in today’s opinion
prohibits universities from considering a student’s essay that
explains “how race affected [that student’s] life.”
Ante, at
39. This supposed recognition that universities can, in some
situations, consider race in application essays is nothing but an
attempt to put lipstick on a pig. The Court’s opinion circumscribes
universities’ ability to consider race in any form by meticulously
gutting respondents’ asserted diversity interests. See
supra, at 41–43. Yet, because the Court cannot escape the
inevitable truth that race matters in students’ lives, it announces
a false promise to save face and appear attuned to reality. No one
is fooled.
Further, the Court’s demand that a student’s
discussion of racial self-identification be tied to individual
qualities, such as “courage,” “leadership,” “unique ability,” and
“determination,” only serves to perpetuate the false narrative that
Harvard and UNC currently provide “preferences on the basis of race
alone.”
Ante, at 28–29, 39; see also
ante, at 28,
n. 6 (claiming without support that “race alone
. . . explains the admissions decisions for hundreds if
not thousands of applicants”). The Court’s precedents already
require that universities take race into account holistically, in a
limited way, and based on the type of “individualized” and
“flexible” assessment that the Court purports to favor.
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 334; see Brief for Students and
Alumni of Harvard College as
Amici Curiae 15–17 (Harvard
College Brief ) (describing how the dozens of application
files in the record “uniformly show that, in line with Harvard’s
‘whole-person’ admissions philosophy, Harvard’s admissions officers
engage in a highly nuanced assessment of each applicant’s
background and qualifications”). After extensive discovery and two
lengthy trials, neither SFFA nor the majority can point to a single
example of an underrepresented racial minority who was admitted to
Harvard or UNC on the basis of “race alone.”
In the end, the Court merely imposes its
preferred college application format on the Nation, not acting as a
court of law applying precedent but taking on the role of college
administrators to decide what is better for society. The Court’s
course reflects its inability to recognize that racial identity
informs some students’ viewpoints and experiences in unique ways.
The Court goes as far as to claim that
Bakke’s recognition
that Black Americans can offer different perspectives than white
people amounts to a “stereotype.”
Ante, at 29.
It is not a stereotype to acknowledge the basic
truth that young people’s experiences are shaded by a societal
structure where race matters. Acknowledging that there is something
special about a student of color who graduates valedictorian from a
predominantly white school is not a stereotype. Nor is it a
stereotype to acknowledge that race imposes certain burdens on
students of color that it does not impose on white students. “For
generations, black and brown parents have given their children ‘the
talk’—instructing them never to run down the street; always keep
your hands where they can be seen; do not even think of talking
back to a stranger—all out of fear of how an officer with a gun
will react to them.”
Utah v
. Strieff, 579 U.S. 232,
254 (2016) (Sotomayor, J., dissenting). Those conversations occur
regardless of socioeconomic background or any other aspect of a
student’s self-identification. They occur because of race. As
Andrew Brennen, a UNC alumnus, testified, “running down the
neighborhood . . . people don’t see [him] as someone that
is relatively affluent; they see [him] as a black man.” 2 App. in
No. 21–707, at 951–952.
The absence of racial diversity, by contrast,
actually contributes to stereotyping. “[D]iminishing the force of
such stereotypes is both a crucial part of [respondents’] mission,
and one that [they] cannot accomplish with only token numbers of
minority students.”
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 333. When
there is an increase in underrepresented minority students on
campus, “racial stereotypes lose their force” because diversity
allows students to “learn there is no ‘minority viewpoint’ but
rather a variety of viewpoints among minority students.”
Id., at 319–320. By preventing respondents from achieving
their diversity objectives, it is the Court’s opinion that
facilitates stereotyping on American college campuses.
To be clear, today’s decision leaves intact
holistic college admissions and recruitment efforts that seek to
enroll diverse classes without using racial classifications.
Universities should continue to use those tools as best they can to
recruit and admit students from different backgrounds based on all
the other factors the Court’s opinion does not, and cannot, touch.
Colleges and universities can continue to consider socioeconomic
diversity and to recruit and enroll students who are
first-generation college applicants or who speak multiple
languages, for example. Those factors are not “interchangeable”
with race.
UNC, 567 F. Supp. 3d, at 643; see,
e.g., 2 App. in No. 21–707, at 975–976 (Laura Ornelas, a UNC
alumna, testifying that her Latina identity, socioeconomic status,
and first-generation college status are all important but different
“parts to getting a full picture” of who she is and how she “see[s]
the world”). At SFFA’s own urging, those efforts remain
constitutionally permissible. See Brief for Petitioner 81–86
(emphasizing “race-neutral” alternatives that Harvard and UNC
should implement, such as those that focus on socioeconomic and
geographic diversity, percentage plans, plans that increase
community college transfers, and plans that develop partnerships
with disadvantaged high schools); see also
ante, at 51, 53,
55–56 (Thomas, J., concurring) (arguing universities can consider
“[r]ace-neutral policies” similar to those adopted in States such
as California and Michigan, and that universities can consider
“status as a first-generation college applicant,” “financial
means,” and “generational inheritance or otherwise”);
ante,
at 8 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (citing SFFA’s briefs and
concluding that universities can use “race-neutral” means);
ante, at 14, n. 4 (Gorsuch, J., concurring)
(“recount[ing] what SFFA has argued every step of the way” as to
“race-neutral tools”).
The Court today also does not adopt SFFA’s
suggestion that college admissions should be a function of academic
metrics alone. Using class rank or standardized test scores as the
only admissions criteria would severely undermine multidimensional
diversity in higher education. Such a system “would exclude the
star athlete or musician whose grades suffered because of daily
practices and training. It would exclude a talented young biologist
who struggled to maintain above-average grades in humanities
classes. And it would exclude a student whose freshman-year grades
were poor because of a family crisis but who got herself back on
track in her last three years of school, only to find herself just
outside of the top decile of her class.”
Fisher II, 579
U. S., at 386. A myopic focus on academic ratings “does not
lead to a diverse student body.”
Ibid.[
36]
2
As noted above, this Court suggests that the
use of race in college admissions is unworkable because
respondents’ objectives are not sufficiently “measurable,”
“focused,” “concrete,” and “coherent.”
Ante, at 23, 26, 39.
How much more precision is required or how universities are
supposed to meet the Court’s measurability requirement, the Court’s
opinion does not say. That is exactly the point. The Court is not
interested in crafting a workable framework that promotes racial
diversity on college campuses. Instead, it announces a requirement
designed to ensure all race-conscious plans fail. Any increased
level of precision runs the risk of violating the Court’s
admonition that colleges and universities operate their
race-conscious admissions policies with no “ ‘specified
percentage[s]’ ” and no “specific number[s] firmly in mind.”
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 324, 335. Thus, the majority’s
holding puts schools in an untenable position. It creates a legal
framework where race-conscious plans
must be measured with
precision but also
must not be measured with
precision. That holding is not meant to infuse clarity into the
strict scrutiny framework; it is designed to render strict scrutiny
“ ‘fatal in fact.’ ”
Id., at 326 (quoting
Adarand Constructors,
Inc., 515 U. S., at 237).
Indeed, the Court gives the game away when it holds that, to the
extent respondents are actually measuring their diversity
objectives with any level of specificity (for example, with a
“focus on numbers” or specific “numerical commitment”), their plans
are unconstitutional.
Ante, at 30–31; see also
ante,
at 29 (Thomas, J., concurring) (“I highly doubt any [university]
will be able to” show a “measurable state interest”).
3
The Court also holds that Harvard’s and UNC’s
race-conscious programs are unconstitutional because they rely on
racial categories that are “imprecise,” “opaque,” and “arbitrary.”
Ante, at 25. To start, the racial categories that the Court
finds troubling resemble those used across the Federal Government
for data collection, compliance reporting, and program
administration purposes, including, for example, by the U. S.
Census Bureau. See,
e.g., 62 Fed. Reg. 58786–58790 (1997).
Surely, not all “ ‘federal grant-in-aid benefits, drafting of
legislation, urban and regional planning, business planning, and
academic and social studies’ ” that flow from census data
collection,
Department of Commerce v.
New York, 588
U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (slip op., at 2), are constitutionally
suspect.
The majority presumes that it knows better and
appoints itself as an expert on data collection methods, calling
for a higher level of granularity to fix a supposed problem of
overinclusiveness and underinclusiveness. Yet it does not identify
a single instance where respondents’ methodology has prevented any
student from reporting their race with the level of detail they
preferred. The record shows that it is up to students to choose
whether to identify as one, multiple, or none of these categories.
See
Harvard I, 397 F. Supp. 3d, at 137;
UNC, 567
F. Supp. 3d, at 596. To the extent students need to convey
additional information, students can select subcategories or
provide more detail in their personal statements or essays. See
Harvard I, 397 F. Supp. 3d, at 137. Students often do
so. See,
e.g., 2 App. in No. 20–1199, at 906–907 (student
respondent discussing her Latina identity on her application);
id., at 949 (student respondent testifying he “wrote about
[his] Vietnamese identity on [his] application”). Notwithstanding
this Court’s confusion about racial self-identification, neither
students nor universities are confused. There is no evidence that
the racial categories that respondents use are unworkable.[
37]
4
Cherry-picking language from
Grutter,
the Court also holds that Harvard’s and UNC’s race-conscious
programs are unconstitutional because they do not have a specific
expiration date.
Ante, at 30–34. This new durational
requirement is also not grounded in law, facts, or common sense.
Grutter simply announced a general “expect[ation]” that “the
use of racial preferences [would] no longer be necessary” in the
future. 539 U. S., at 343. As even SFFA acknowledges, those
remarks were nothing but aspirational statements by the
Grutter Court. Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 21–707,
p. 56.
Yet this Court suggests that everyone, including
the Court itself, has been misreading
Grutter for 20 years.
Grutter, according to the majority, requires that
universities identify a specific “end point” for the use of race.
Ante, at 33
. Justice Kavanaugh, for his part,
suggests that
Grutter itself automatically expires in 25
years, after either “the college class of 2028” or “the college
class of 2032.”
Ante, at 7, n. 1. A faithful reading of
this Court’s precedents reveals that
Grutter held nothing of
the sort.
True,
Grutter referred to “25 years,” but
that arbitrary number simply reflected the time that had elapsed
since the Court “first approved the use of race” in college
admissions in
Bakke.
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 343.
It is also true that
Grutter remarked that “race-conscious
admissions policies must be limited in time,” but it did not do so
in a vaccum, as the Court suggests.
Id., at 342. Rather than
impose a fixed expiration date, the Court tasked universities with
the responsibility of periodically assessing whether their
race-conscious programs “are still necessary.”
Ibid. Grutter
offered as examples sunset provisions, periodic reviews, and
experimenting with “race-neutral alternatives as they develop.”
Ibid. That is precisely how this Court has previously
interpreted
Grutter’s command. See
Fisher II, 579
U. S., at 388 (“It is the University’s ongoing obligation to
engage in constant deliberation and continued reflection regarding
its admissions policies”).
Grutter’s requirement that universities
engage in periodic reviews so the use of race can end “as soon as
practicable” is well grounded in the need to ensure that race is
“employed no more broadly than the interest demands.” 539
U. S., at 343. That is, it is grounded in strict scrutiny. By
contrast, the Court’s holding is based on the fiction that racial
inequality has a predictable cutoff date. Equality is an ongoing
project in a society where racial inequality persists. See
supra, at 17–25. A temporal requirement that rests on the
fantasy that racial inequality will end at a predictable hour is
illogical and unworkable. There is a sound reason why this Court’s
precedents have never imposed the majority’s strict deadline:
Institutions cannot predict the future. Speculating about a day
when consideration of race will become unnecessary is arbitrary at
best and frivolous at worst. There is no constitutional duty to
engage in that type of shallow guesswork
.[
38]
Harvard and UNC engage in the ongoing review
that the Court’s precedents demand. They “use [their] data to
scrutinize the fairness of [their] admissions program[s]; to assess
whether changing demographics have undermined the need for a
race-conscious policy; and to identify the effects, both positive
and negative, of the affirmative-action measures [they] dee[m]
necessary.”
Fisher II, 579 U. S., at 388. The Court
holds, however, that respondents’ attention to numbers amounts to
unconstitutional racial balancing.
Ante, at 30–32. But
“ ‘[s]ome attention to numbers’ ” is both necessary and
permissible.
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 336 (quoting
Bakke, 438 U. S., at 323). Universities cannot blindly
operate their limited race-conscious programs without regard for
any quantitative information. “Increasing minority enrollment [is]
instrumental to th[e] educational benefits” that respondents seek
to achieve,
Fisher II, 579 U. S., at 381, and
statistics, data, and numbers “have some value as a gauge of
[respondents’] ability to enroll students who can offer
underrepresented perspectives.”
Id., at 383–384. By removing
universities’ ability to assess the success of their programs, the
Court obstructs these institutions’ ability to meet their diversity
goals.
5
Justice Thomas, for his part, offers a
multitude of arguments for why race-conscious college admissions
policies supposedly “burden” racial minorities.
Ante, at 39.
None of them has any merit.
He first renews his argument that the use of
race in holistic admissions leads to the “inevitable”
“underperformance” by Black and Latino students at elite
universities “because they are less academically prepared than the
white and Asian students with whom they must compete.”
Fisher
I, 570 U. S., at 332 (concurring opinion). Justice Thomas
speaks only for himself. The Court previously declined to adopt
this so-called “mismatch” hypothesis for good reason: It was
debunked long ago. The decades-old “studies” advanced by the
handful of authors upon whom Justice Thomas relies,
ante, at
40–41, have “major methodological flaws,” are based on unreliable
data, and do not “meet the basic tenets of rigorous social science
research.” Brief for Empirical Scholars as
Amici Curiae 3,
9–25. By contrast, “[m]any social scientists have studied the
impact of elite educational institutions on student outcomes, and
have found, among other things, that attending a more selective
school is associated with higher graduation rates and higher
earnings for [underrepresented minority] students—conclusions
directly contrary to mismatch.”
Id., at 7–9 (collecting
studies). This extensive body of research is supported by the most
obvious data point available to this institution today: The three
Justices of color on this Court graduated from elite universities
and law schools with race-conscious admissions programs, and
achieved successful legal careers, despite having different
educational backgrounds than their peers. A discredited hypothesis
that the Court previously rejected is no reason to overrule
precedent.
Justice Thomas claims that the weight of this
evidence is overcome by a single more recent article published in
2016.
Ante, at 41, n. 8. That article, however,
explains that studies supporting the mismatch hypothesis “yield
misleading conclusions,” “overstate the amount of mismatch,”
“preclude one from drawing any concrete conclusions,” and rely on
methodologically flawed assumptions that “lea[d] to an
upwardly-biased estimate of mismatch.” P. Arcidiacono & M.
Lovenheim, Affirmative Action and the Quality-Fit Trade-off, 54 J.
Econ. Lit. 3, 17, 20 (2016); see
id., at 6 (“economists
should be very skeptical of the mismatch hypothesis”). Notably,
this refutation of the mismatch theory was coauthored by one of
SFFA’s experts, as Justice Thomas seems to recognize.
Citing nothing but his own long-held belief,
Justice Thomas also equates affirmative action in higher education
with segregation, arguing that “racial preferences in college
admissions ‘stamp [Black and Latino students] with a badge of
inferiority.’ ”
Ante, at 41 (quoting
Adarand,
515 U. S., at 241 (Thomas, J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment)). Studies disprove this sentiment, which
echoes “tropes of stigma” that “were employed to oppose
Reconstruction policies.” A. Onwuachi-Willig, E. Houh, & M.
Campbell, Cracking the Egg: Which Came First—Stigma or Affirmative
Action? 96 Cal. L. Rev. 1299, 1323 (2008); see,
e.g.,
id., at 1343–1344 (study of seven law schools showing that
stigma results from “racial stereotypes that have attached
historically to different groups, regardless of affirmative
action’s existence”). Indeed, equating state-sponsored segregation
with race-conscious admissions policies that promote racial
integration trivializes the harms of segregation and offends
Brown’s transformative legacy. School segregation “has a
detrimental effect” on Black students by “denoting the inferiority”
of “their status in the community” and by “ ‘depriv[ing] them
of some of the benefits they would receive in a racial[ly]
integrated school system.’ ” 347 U. S., at 494. In sharp
contrast, race-conscious college admissions ensure that higher
education is “visibly open to” and “inclusive of talented and
qualified individuals of every race and ethnicity.”
Grutter,
539 U. S., at 332. These two uses of race are not created
equal. They are not “equally objectionable.”
Id., at
327.
Relatedly, Justice Thomas suggests that
race-conscious college admissions policies harm racial minorities
by increasing affinity-based activities on college campuses.
Ante, at 46. Not only is there no evidence of a causal
connection between the use of race in college admissions and the
supposed rise of those activities, but Justice Thomas points to no
evidence that affinity groups cause any harm. Affinity-based
activities actually help racial minorities improve their visibility
on college campuses and “decreas[e] racial stigma and vulnerability
to stereotypes” caused by “conditions of racial isolation” and
“tokenization.” U. Jayakumar, Why Are All Black Students
Still Sitting Together in the Proverbial College Cafeteria?,
Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA (Oct. 2015); see also
Brief for Respondent-Students in No. 21–707, p. 42 (collecting
student testimony demonstrating that “affinity groups beget
important academic and social benefits” for racial minorities); 4
App. in No. 20–1199, at 1591 (Harvard Working Group on Diversity
and Inclusion Report) (noting that concerns “that culturally
specific spaces or affinity-themed housing will isolate” student
minorities are misguided because those spaces allow students “to
come together . . . to deal with intellectual, emotional,
and social challenges”).
Citing no evidence, Justice Thomas also suggests
that race-conscious admissions programs discriminate against Asian
American students.
Ante, at 43–44. It is true that SFFA
“allege[d]” that Harvard discriminates against Asian American
students.
Ante, at 43
. Specifically, SFFA argued that
Harvard discriminates against Asian American applicants vis-à-vis
white applicants through the use of the personal rating, an
allegedly “highly subjective” component of the admissions process
that is “susceptible to stereotyping and bias.”
Harvard II,
980 F. 3d, at 196; see Brief for Professors of Economics as
Amici Curiae 24. It is also true, however, that there was a
lengthy trial to test those allegations, which SFFA lost. Justice
Thomas points to no legal or factual error below, precisely because
there is none.
To begin, this part of SFFA’s discrimination
claim does not even fall under the strict scrutiny framework in
Grutter and its progeny, which concerns the use of racial
classifications. The personal rating is a facially
race-
neutral component of Harvard’s admissions
policy.[
39] Therefore, even
assuming for the sake of argument that Harvard engages in racial
discrimination through the personal rating, there is no connection
between that rating and the remedy that SFFA sought and that the
majority grants today: ending the limited use of race in the entire
admissions process. In any event, after assessing the credibility
of fact witnesses and considering extensive documentary evidence
and expert testimony, the courts below found “no discrimination
against Asian Americans.”
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d, at
195, n. 34, 202; see
id., at 195–204.
There is no question that the Asian American
community continues to struggle against potent and dehumanizing
stereotypes in our society. It is precisely because racial
discrimination persists in our society, however, that the use of
race in college admissions to achieve racially diverse classes is
critical to improving cross-racial understanding and breaking down
racial stereotypes. See
supra, at 16. Indeed, the record
shows that some Asian American applicants are actually “advantaged
by Harvard’s use of race,”
Harvard II, 980 F. 3d, at
191, and “eliminating consideration of race would significantly
disadvantage at least some Asian American applicants,”
Harvard
I, 397 F. Supp. 3d, at 194. Race-conscious holistic
admissions that contextualize the racial identity of each
individual allow Asian American applicants “who would be less
likely to be admitted without a comprehensive understanding of
their background” to explain “the value of their unique background,
heritage, and perspective.”
Id., at 195. Because the Asian
American community is not a monolith, race-conscious holistic
admissions allow colleges and universities to “consider the vast
differences within [that] community.” AALDEF Brief 4–14. Harvard’s
application files show that race-conscious holistic admissions
allow Harvard to “valu[e ] the diversity of Asian American
applicants’ experiences.” Harvard College Brief 23.
Moreover, the admission rates of Asian Americans
at institutions with race-conscious admissions policies, including
at Harvard, have “been steadily increasing for decades.”
Harvard
II, 980 F. 3d, at 198.[
40] By contrast, Asian American enrollment declined at
elite universities that are prohibited by state law from
considering race. See AALDEF Brief 27; Brief for 25 Diverse,
California-Focused Bar Associations et al. as
Amici
Curiae 19–20, 23. At bottom, race-conscious admissions benefit
all students, including racial minorities. That includes the Asian
American community.
Finally, Justice Thomas belies reality by
suggesting that “experts and elites” with views similar to those
“that motivated
Dred Scott and
Plessy” are the ones
who support race conscious admissions.
Ante, at 39. The
plethora of young students of color who testified in favor of
race-consciousness proves otherwise. See
supra, at 46–47;
see also
infra, at 64–67 (discussing numerous
amici
from many sectors of society supporting respondents’ policies). Not
a single student—let alone any racial minority—affected by the
Court’s decision testified in favor of SFFA in these cases.
C
In its “radical claim to power,” the Court
does not even acknowledge the important reliance interests that
this Court’s precedents have generated.
Dobbs, 597
U. S., at ___ (dissenting opinion) (slip op., at 53).
Significant rights and expectations will be affected by today’s
decision nonetheless. Those interests supply “added force” in favor
of
stare decisis.
Hilton v.
South Carolina Public
Railways Comm’n,
502 U.S.
197, 202 (1991).
Students of all backgrounds have formed settled
expectations that universities with race-conscious policies “will
provide diverse, cross-cultural experiences that will better
prepare them to excel in our increasingly diverse world.” Brief for
Respondent-Students in No. 21–707, at 45; see Harvard College Brief
6–11 (collecting student testimony).
Respondents and other colleges and universities
with race-conscious admissions programs similarly have concrete
reliance interests because they have spent significant resources in
an effort to comply with this Court’s precedents. “Universities
have designed courses that draw on the benefits of a diverse
student body,” “hired faculty whose research is enriched by the
diversity of the student body,” and “promoted their learning
environments to prospective students who have enrolled based on the
understanding that they could obtain the benefits of diversity of
all kinds.” Brief for Respondent in No. 20–1199, at 40–41 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Universities also have “expended vast
financial and other resources” in “training thousands of
application readers on how to faithfully apply this Court’s
guardrails on the use of race in admissions.” Brief for University
Respondents in No. 21–707, p. 44. Yet today’s decision
abruptly forces them “to fundamentally alter their admissions
practices.”
Id., at 45; see also Brief for Massachusetts
Institute of Technology et al. as
Amici Curiae 25–26;
Brief for Amherst College et al. as
Amici Curiae 23–25
(Amherst Brief ). As to Title VI in particular, colleges and
universities have relied on
Grutter for decades in accepting
federal funds. See Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae
in No. 20–1199, p. 25 (United States Brief ); Georgetown
Brief 16.
The Court’s failure to weigh these reliance
interests “is a stunning indictment of its decision.”
Dobbs,
597 U. S., at ___ (dissenting opinion) (slip op., at 55).
IV
The use of race in college admissions has had
profound consequences by increasing the enrollment of
underrepresented minorities on college campuses. This Court
presupposes that segregation is a sin of the past and that
race-conscious college admissions have played no role in the
progress society has made. The fact that affirmative action in
higher education “has worked and is continuing to work” is no
reason to abandon the practice today.
Shelby County v
.
Holder,
570 U.S.
529, 590 (2013) (Ginsburg, J., dissenting) (“[It] is like
throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not
getting wet”).
Experience teaches that the consequences of
today’s decision will be destructive. The two lengthy trials below
simply confirmed what we already knew: Superficial colorblindness
in a society that systematically segregates opportunity will cause
a sharp decline in the rates at which underrepresented minority
students enroll in our Nation’s colleges and universities, turning
the clock back and undoing the slow yet significant progress
already achieved. See
Schuette, 572 U. S., at 384–390
(Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (collecting statistics from States that
have banned the use of race in college admissions); see also
Amherst Brief 13 (noting that eliminating the use of race in
college admissions will take Black student enrollment at elite
universities back to levels this country saw in the early
1960s).
After California amended its State Constitution
to prohibit race-conscious college admissions in 1996, for example,
“freshmen enrollees from underrepresented minority groups dropped
precipitously” in California public universities. Brief for
President and Chancellors of the University of California as
Amici Curiae 4, 9, 11–13. The decline was particularly
devastating at California’s most selective campuses, where the
rates of admission of underrepresented groups “dropped by 50% or
more.”
Id., at 4, 12. At the University of California,
Berkeley, a top public university not just in California but also
nationally, the percentage of Black students in the freshman class
dropped from 6.32% in 1995 to 3.37% in 1998.
Id., at 12–13.
Latino representation similarly dropped from 15.57% to 7.28% during
that period at Berkeley, even though Latinos represented 31% of
California public high school graduates.
Id., at 13. To this
day, the student population at California universities still
“reflect[s] a persistent inability to increase opportunities” for
all racial groups.
Id., at 23. For example, as of 2019, the
proportion of Black freshmen at Berkeley was 2.76%, well below the
pre-constitutional amendment level in 1996, which was 6.32%.
Ibid. Latinos composed about 15% of freshmen students at
Berkeley in 2019, despite making up 52% of all California public
high school graduates.
Id., at 24; see also Brief for
University of Michigan as
Amicus Curiae 21–24 (noting
similar trends at the University of Michigan from 2006, the last
admissions cycle before Michigan’s ban on race-conscious admissions
took effect, through present);
id., at 24–25 (explaining
that the university’s “experience is largely consistent with other
schools that do not consider race as a factor in admissions,”
including, for example, the University of Oklahoma’s most
prestigious campus).
The costly result of today’s decision harms not
just respondents and students but also our institutions and
democratic society more broadly. Dozens of
amici from nearly
every sector of society agree that the absence of race-conscious
college admissions will decrease the pipeline of racially diverse
college graduates to crucial professions. Those
amici
include the United States, which emphasizes the need for diversity
in the Nation’s military, see United States Brief 12–18, and in the
federal workforce more generally,
id., at 19–20 (discussing
various federal agencies, including the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence). The United States explains that “the Nation’s
military strength and readiness depend on a pipeline of officers
who are both highly qualified and racially diverse—and who have
been educated in diverse environments that prepare them to lead
increasingly diverse forces.”
Id., at 12. That is true not
just at the military service academies but “at civilian
universities, including Harvard, that host Reserve Officers’
Training Corps (ROTC) programs and educate students who go on to
become officers.”
Ibid. Top former military leaders agree.
See Brief for Adm. Charles S. Abbot et al. as
Amici
Curiae 3 (noting that in
amici’s “professional judgment,
the status quo—which permits service academies and civilian
universities to consider racial diversity as one factor among many
in their admissions practices—is essential to the continued
vitality of the U. S. military”).
Indeed, history teaches that racial diversity is
a national security imperative. During the Vietnam War, for
example, lack of racial diversity “threatened the integrity and
performance of the Nation’s military” because it fueled
“perceptions of racial/ethnic minorities serving as ‘cannon fodder’
for white military leaders.” Military Leadership Diversity Comm’n,
From Representation to Inclusion: Diversity Leadership for the
21st-Century Military xvi, 15 (2011); see also,
e.g., R.
Stillman, Racial Unrest in the Military: The Challenge and the
Response, 34 Pub. Admin. Rev. 221, 221–222 (1974) (discussing other
examples of racial unrest). Based on “lessons from decades of
battlefield experience,” it has been the “longstanding military
judgment” across administrations that racial diversity “is
essential to achieving a mission-ready” military and to ensuring
the Nation’s “ability to compete, deter, and win in today’s
increasingly complex global security environment.” United States
Brief 13 (internal quotation marks omitted). The majority
recognizes the compelling need for diversity in the military and
the national security implications at stake, see
ante, at
22, n. 4, but it ends race-conscious college admissions at
civilian universities implicating those interests anyway.
Amici also tell the Court that
race-conscious college admissions are critical for providing
equitable and effective public services. State and local
governments require public servants educated in diverse
environments who can “identify, understand, and respond to
perspectives” in “our increasingly diverse communities.” Brief for
Southern Governors as
Amici Curiae 5–8 (Southern Governors
Brief ). Likewise, increasing the number of students from
underrepresented backgrounds who join “the ranks of medical
professionals” improves “healthcare access and health outcomes in
medically underserved communities.” Brief for Massachusetts
et al. as
Amici Curiae 10; see Brief for Association of
American Medical Colleges et al. as
Amici Curiae 5
(noting also that
all physicians become better practitioners
when they learn in a racially diverse environment). So too, greater
diversity within the teacher workforce improves student academic
achievement in primary public schools. Brief for Massachusetts
et al. as
Amici Curiae 15–17; see Brief for American
Federation of Teachers as
Amicus Curiae 8 (“[T]here are few
professions with broader social impact than teaching”). A diverse
pipeline of college graduates also ensures a diverse legal
profession, which demonstrates that “the justice system serves the
public in a fair and inclusive manner.” Brief for American Bar
Association as
Amicus Curiae 18; see also Brief for Law Firm
Antiracism Alliance as
Amicus Curiae 1, 6 (more than 300 law
firms in all 50 States supporting race-conscious college admissions
in light of the “influence and power” that lawyers wield “in the
American system of government”).
Examples of other industries and professions
that benefit from race-conscious college admissions abound.
American businesses emphasize that a diverse workforce improves
business performance, better serves a diverse consumer marketplace,
and strengthens the overall American economy. Brief for Major
American Business Enterprises as
Amici Curiae 5–27. A
diverse pipeline of college graduates also improves research by
reducing bias and increasing group collaboration. Brief for
Individual Scientists as
Amici Curiae 13–14. It creates a
more equitable and inclusive media industry that communicates
diverse viewpoints and perspectives. Brief for Multicultural Media,
Telecom and Internet Council, Inc., et al. as
Amici
Curiae 6. It also drives innovation in an increasingly global
science and technology industry. Brief for Applied Materials, Inc.,
et al. as
Amici Curiae 11–20.
Today’s decision further entrenches racial
inequality by making these pipelines to leadership roles less
diverse. A college degree, particularly from an elite institution,
carries with it the benefit of powerful networks and the
opportunity for socioeconomic mobility. Admission to college is
therefore often the entry ticket to top jobs in workplaces where
important decisions are made. The overwhelming majority of Members
of Congress have a college degree.[
41] So do most business leaders.[
42] Indeed, many state and local leaders in
North Carolina attended college in the UNC system. See Southern
Governors Brief 8. More than half of judges on the North Carolina
Supreme Court and Court of Appeals graduated from the UNC system,
for example, and nearly a third of the Governor’s cabinet attended
UNC.
Ibid. A less diverse pipeline to these top jobs
accumulates wealth and power unequally across racial lines,
exacerbating racial disparities in a society that already dispenses
prestige and privilege based on race.
The Court ignores the dangerous consequences of
an America where its leadership does not reflect the diversity of
the People. A system of government that visibly lacks a path to
leadership open to every race cannot withstand scrutiny “in the
eyes of the citizenry.”
Grutter, 539 U. S., at 332.
“[G]ross disparity in representation” leads the public to wonder
whether they can ever belong in our Nation’s institutions,
including this one, and whether those institutions work for them.
Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 21–707, p. 171 (“The Court is going to
hear from 27 advocates in this sitting of the oral argument
calendar, and two are women, even though women today are 50 percent
or more of law school graduates. And I think it would be reasonable
for a woman to look at that and wonder, is that a path that’s open
to me, to be a Supreme Court advocate?” (remarks of Solicitor
General Elizabeth Prelogar)).[
43]
By ending race-conscious college admissions,
this Court closes the door of opportunity that the Court’s
precedents helped open to young students of every race. It creates
a leadership pipeline that is less diverse than our increasingly
diverse society, reserving “positions of influence, affluence, and
prestige in America” for a predominantly white pool of college
graduates.
Bakke, 438 U. S., at 401 (opinion of
Marshall, J.). At its core, today’s decision exacerbates
segregation and diminishes the inclusivity of our Nation’s
institutions in service of superficial neutrality that promotes
indifference to inequality and ignores the reality of race.
* * *
True equality of educational opportunity in
racially diverse schools is an essential component of the fabric of
our democratic society. It is an interest of the highest order and
a foundational requirement for the promotion of equal protection
under the law.
Brown recognized that passive race neutrality
was inadequate to achieve the constitutional guarantee of racial
equality in a Nation where the effects of segregation persist. In a
society where race continues to matter, there is no constitutional
requirement that institutions attempting to remedy their legacies
of racial exclusion must operate with a blindfold.
Today, this Court overrules decades of
precedent and imposes a superficial rule of race blindness on the
Nation. The devastating impact of this decision cannot be
overstated. The majority’s vision of race neutrality will entrench
racial segregation in higher education because racial inequality
will persist so long as it is ignored.
Notwithstanding this Court’s actions, however,
society’s progress toward equality cannot be permanently halted.
Diversity is now a fundamental American value, housed in our varied
and multicultural American community that only continues to grow.
The pursuit of racial diversity will go on. Although the Court has
stripped out almost all uses of race in college admissions,
universities can and should continue to use all available tools to
meet society’s needs for diversity in education. Despite the
Court’s unjustified exercise of power, the opinion today will serve
only to highlight the Court’s own impotence in the face of an
America whose cries for equality resound. As has been the case
before in the history of American democracy, “the arc of the moral
universe” will bend toward racial justice despite the Court’s
efforts today to impede its progress. Martin Luther King “Our God
is Marching On!” Speech (Mar. 25, 1965).