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JAISAL NOOR: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Jaisal Noor in Baltimore.
On Monday, the Supreme Court decided it will allow affirmative action to live another day,
sending the closely watched case, Fisher v. University of Texas, back to the Fifth Court
of Appeals and ordering it to take another look at the case under a standard that many
fear will jeopardize the future of affirmative action.
Now joining us to talk more about this case is Glen Ford. He's the cofounder and executive
director of the Black Agenda Report. He also colaunched, produced, and hosted America's
Black Forum, the first nationally syndicated black news interview program on commercial
television.
Thank you for joining us, Glen.
GLEN FORD: Thanks for the invitation, Jaisal.
NOOR: Now, Glen, what's your reaction to the Supreme Court decision? It's allowing affirmative
action to continue, but under a standard that, as I previously mentioned, many fear will
mean the end of affirmative action as we know it.
FORD: Well, it is barely breathing, and I think it's barely affirmative action. What
we're looking at is a diversity kind of program which is quite different than the original
concept of affirmative action. But they have narrowed the scope. They've raised the bar
or lowered the bar, depending upon your perspective. So now the high court, with Judge Kennedy's
decision, it says that basically affirmative action or diversity programs are unconstitutional
unless the university or other institution can find no other available workable race-neutral
alternative to an affirmative action or diversity plan. That is, it is the last resort. So that's--well,
you might call that the last gasp.
NOOR: Now, Glen, you're alluding to this Supreme Court decision that took place ten years ago.
Can you tell us a little bit more about that decision and what impact it's had over the
last ten years?
FORD: Well, in the Grutter decision, they narrowed the constitutional basis for affirmative
action or diversity in such a way that, well, it basically laid all the existing programs
up to some very, very tight scrutiny, a scrutiny that has not yet ended. And that's quite clear
from the decision of the Supreme Court today.
Affirmative action, as we had originally envisioned it, as vocalized by President Lyndon Johnson
in 1965 in his address to Howard University's graduating class, was specifically designed
for black people as a measure to make up for slavery. That is, it was, in Martin Luther
King's words, both compensatory and--it was compensatory and preferential treatment.
Compensatory and preferential treatment has nothing to do with what the Supreme Court
is saying is tolerable, acceptable under the Constitution today. The Supreme Court now
says that, yes, the public institutions may have a stake in having a diverse student body--or
workforce, for that matter--but not on the basis of owing a class of people who have
historically been discriminated against, including by the government, any compensatory and preferential
treatment, that this benefit that comes from diversity accrues to the society and the institution
and is not intended for the group or the individuals who are allowed in under those programs. It's
very different.
NOOR: So I guess the underlying assumption is that the economic and other gaps between
African-Americans and whites that existed in 1965 don't exist today. What's your response?
FORD: Certainly the rationale for uplifting specifically blacks because of documentable
past disadvantages that were inflicted upon them partly by the government, that rationale
is no longer considered by a majority on the Supreme Court to be a constitutional rationale.
In Texas, there is a top 10 percent plan that allows entrance to the state universities
for anyone who shows up at the top 10 percent of their class. That in fact--that program
dwarfs at the University of Texas--and the University of Texas was the subject of the
Supreme Court decision--the number of people impacted by that plan dwarfs the so-called
affirmative action plan that was ruled on today. No more than--just a little over 200
people out of a university of 52,000 come under the affirmative-action plan, whereas
thousands have been admitted, thousands of minorities, black and brown students have
been admitted under the top 10 percent plan. The top 10 percent plan actually is a much
more practical way for moving lots of minorities into higher education simply because white
folks insist that they're going to have segregated public schools, that there is going to be
dual public school system. And as long as that is the case, then we can guarantee that
at least there will be some respectable number of black kids going to state colleges if there
are segregated high schools, if the top 10 percent of those segregated high schools will
gain automatic entrance into those colleges. So it's a much more effective plan then the
watered-down and besieged and beleaguered affirmative-action plan at the same University
of Texas.
NOOR: And I want to get to your response. This case, Fisher v. University of Texas,
was filed by Abigail Fisher, a white woman from Texas who said that she was a victim
of racial discrimination because she was denied admission and less qualified minority students
were admitted instead.
FORD: [inaud.] point out that Ms. Fisher did not show up in the top 10 percent of her class,
which I presume was at a predominantly white high school, and therefore was not qualified
to enter the University of Texas under that plan. So now--that was in 2008. So Ms. Fisher
now wants to compete only with those 200 or so--just a drop in the bucket of students--who
for various reasons that have nothing to do with quotas, because quotas have been outlawed
by the Supreme Court, for various reasons their presence in the university system, these
very small numbers, the university believes will create a better environment for the entire
university. In other words, the University is not saying that it has an obligation to
any one of those 200 students that it allows in, but that it has an obligation to the university
public, to all of the student body and the university as an institution, to at least
have some people of color represented through this kind of plan.
NOOR: So it's believed that this decision will spur a wave of challenges across the
country to similar programs.
FORD: If the new standard is that affirmative action or diversity programs are unconstitutional
unless there are no other alternatives, then all these institutions are going to have to
prove that they could not find any other way to get a number of minority students into
the student body except through that program. And that's almost like having to prove a negative,
isn't it?
NOOR: And Glen, if affirmative action is ultimately killed, as many fear it will be, what should
people be calling for instead in its wake?
FORD: The top 10 percent plan or top 15 percent plan has shown that given there's going to
be in the United States a segregated public school system, that the only way to guarantee
that significant numbers of minority students get into higher education is to have a guaranteed
slice of the students from their schools be admitted into the system. So in this sense--and
I know it sounds strange--Texas is ahead of most of the country with their top 10 percent
plan. We'd see better numbers throughout the country if the rest of the states adopted
one. We will see tiny numbers even if affirmative action as seen in the program that was before
the Supreme Court today, if we're talking about those kinds of programs, they only involve
small percentages of people at these institutions anyway. So the wholesale solution is more
like the 10 percent plan.
NOOR: Thanks so much for joining us, Glen.
FORD: Okay. Thank you.
NOOR: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.