The Supreme Court will once again confront the issue of race in
university admissions in a case brought by a white student denied a spot
at the flagship campus of the University of Texas.
The court said Tuesday it will return to the issue of affirmative action
in higher education for the first time since its 2003 decision
endorsing the use of race as a factor in admissions. This time around, a
more conservative court is being asked to outlaw the use of Texas'
affirmative action plan and possibly to jettison the earlier ruling
entirely.
A broad ruling in favor of the student, Abigail Fisher, could threaten
affirmative action programs at many of the nation's public and private
universities, said Vanderbilt University law professor Brian
Fitzpatrick.
A federal appeals court upheld the Texas program at issue, saying it was
allowed under the high court's decision in Grutter vs. Bollinger in
2003 that upheld racial considerations in university admissions at the
University of Michigan law school.
The Texas case will be argued in the fall, probably in the final days of
the presidential election campaign, and the changed makeup of the
Supreme Court could foretell a different outcome. For one thing, Justice
Samuel Alito appears more hostile to affirmative action than his
predecessor, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. For another, Justice Elena
Kagan, who might be expected to vote with the court's liberal-leaning
justices in support of it, is not taking part in the case.
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