Are we now a colorblind nation?
We now know that the enactment of
the Voting Rights Act almost a half-century ago has been responsible
for nothing short of a reformation in the expansion of voting rights,
particularly in the South where there had been pervasive voter
discrimination against African-Americans.
We also know that the 1982
amendments to the act were responsible for the creation of
majority-minority congressional districts, and that they have
produced so many gerrymandered seats for both parties.
Since its enactment in 1965, the
act has been renewed four times. The most recent renewal was in 2006
for another 25 years. The renewal passed the House 390-33 and the
Senate 98-0. Such lopsided majorities would seem to suggest that the
extension is an obvious, unblemished good. But maybe there's more
here than meets the eye.
Let's look at a case currently
before the Supreme Court, Shelby v. Holder. Shelby County, Ala., is
challenging the constitutionality of Section 5 of the act. That is
the section that requires certain state and local governments in the
South with a history of voter discrimination to seek and receive
approval from the federal government prior to making any changes in
their voting procedures, regardless of how trivial such changes are.
This is what is called "pre-clearance."
When Section 5 was enacted, there
was no doubt that the states and counties it covered in the South had
an obvious track record of voter disenfranchisement aimed at blacks.
And there is no disagreement that Section 5's requirement for
pre-clearance tramples on federalism and the sovereignty of the
states. In 1965, that was an acceptable price to pay in order to
begin to deal with voter disenfranchisement. The question before the
court now is whether it's still an acceptable price.
The oral argument before the court
a month ago suggested that the four liberal justices favor the
continuation of Section 5, while four conservative justices appear
poised to strike it down. Justice Anthony Kennedy is the swing vote.
By this June, we will know whether the court will do what Congress
would not do when it overwhelmingly voted to extend Section 5 in
2006: defy political correctness and recognize that Section 5 has
done its job but is no longer needed.
But wait. There's more!
The court is also considering
another case where race is at the core of the constitutional dispute,
Fisher v. University of Texas. Abigail Fisher, who is white, argues
she was not admitted to the University of Texas because of her race.
It is possible that the court's ruling in this case may profoundly
alter the current nine-year precedent on affirmative action that it
set in 2003 when Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote the 5-4 decision
(Grutter v. Bollinger) in which the court affirmed the University of
Michigan's use of race as a factor in its admissions policy so long
as it did not amount to a quota system.
The central point of the Grutter v.
Bollinger decision in 2003 was that the university can make use of
race in its admissions policy until it achieves a "critical
mass" of diversity within its student body. The problem then and
now is that "critical mass" remains an undefined term.
Universities won't define it for fear that, if they do, they will
have cut across the bow of what is prohibited — using a racial
quota system.
Greg Garre, who represented the
University of Texas before the court, tried to argue that a "critical
mass" was when underrepresented minorities don't feel isolated.
Chief Justice Roberts didn't buy Garre's argument.
What makes this case so important
is that its impact will likely go way beyond Fisher and the
University of Texas. It's possible the Fisher decision will
substantially reduce the degrees of freedom that universities have
with respect to the use of race in their admissions policies. Such a
ruling would amount to a watershed in the realm of affirmative
action.
Like the Shelby case, Justice
Kennedy holds the swing vote. A hint of Kennedy's thinking emerged
during the questioning of Garre concerning the university's use of
race in admissions. Kennedy pointedly asked Garre, "So what
you're saying is that what counts is race above all?"
But the most significant piece of
this fascinating puzzle is Chief Justice Roberts. Jeffery Toobin, a
legal analyst who writes for The New Yorker, believes Roberts is on
the verge of letting all of us know that his signature issue will be
an affirmation that the Constitution is colorblind. The decisions
this June in Shelby and Fisher may have the same bottom line — the
nation's fight against racial discrimination has been won.
Toobin states, "Race-conscious
policies have transformed our schools and workplaces. The Voting
Rights Act has given the South new and very different politics. But
affirmative action, in Roberts' view, has become discrimination
against whites."
If, however, current policy is
maintained, we can all look forward to 2043 when, according to Census
Bureau statistics, America will be a majority-minority nation. At
that point, it will be the whites who will be packed into racially
homogenous, gerrymandered districts!
And, were that to happen, I believe
Judge Robinson O. Everett would look down from heaven and conclude
that white majority-minority districts in the mid-21st century are
just as abhorrent and unconstitutional as black ones were in the late
20th century.
The
Shadow's always been colorblind, and Goldman can be reached
at: EmailMe
Please Visit: Citizens Against Politics As Usual
Please Visit: Mike Tower Political Opinions
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.