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US Supreme Court rules school districts cannot consider race
in integration plans
By John Burton
29 June 2007
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On Thursday, the last court session before its traditional
summer recess, the Supreme Court struck down school integration
plans in Seattle, Washington and Louisville, Kentucky, ruling
for the first time that local school officials cannot constitutionally
consider the race of their students when implementing plans to
maintain racial balance among public schools within their districts.
The court reversed lower court rulings that had upheld the integration
plans.
The decision in the consolidated cases of Parents Involved
in Community Schools v. Seattle School District and Meredith
v. Jefferson County Board of Education is the most significant
high court pronouncement on racial integration since 1954, when
the Supreme Court held racially segregating public schools to
be illegal in Brown v. School Board.
Yesterdays decision immediately calls into question hundreds
of integration plans currently in place throughout the United
States. Because a school district cannot promote racial integration
without taking its students racial characteristics into
consideration, all school districts that do not immediately abandon
their integration plans face the threat of protracted litigation.
The more long-term effect of the ruling will be to roll back
school integration, which has already proven difficult to implement
and maintain, reversing much of the democratic advance embodied
in Brown and the concomitant civil rights struggles of
the post-war era.
This thoroughly reactionary legal precedent marks a fitting
conclusion to the first full Supreme Court term of Bush appointees
Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. and Associate Justice Samuel
A. Alito, Jr.
With associate justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and,
more often than not, Anthony M. Kennedy, they comprise a majority
five-justice voting bloc responsible not only for dismantling
school desegregation, but also, among other things, limiting the
right of workers to sue for discrimination in pay scales, restricting
the right of condemned prisoners to seek habeas corpus, curtailing
the right of high school students to express themselves off campus,
limiting the right of taxpayers to challenge government expenditures
on religion, and attacking the right of women to late-term abortions
prescribed by their doctors for health reasons. At the same time,
the court has issued pro-corporate rulings protecting the right
of big business to influence elections and to manipulate prices
and the stock market without incurring any civil liability.
This spate of anti-democratic rulings was made possible by
the complicity of Senate Democrats, who refused to use the filibuster
to block the confirmation of Roberts and Alito, despite the well-established
ultra-conservative records of both as judges in the United States
Court of Appeals, and the obvious consequences of allowing such
a right-wing Supreme Court majority to be formed.
Brown, considered among the most significant decisions
in Supreme Court history, was decided unanimously, as were many
of the subsequent school desegregation decisions. In contrast,
none of the five opinions issued yesterday garnered the majority
requirement of five votes. Running an extraordinary 185 pages
in total, the opinions are replete with pointed challenges, and
even outright insults, among the justices, highlighting deep divisions
on the high court.
The measures being challenged in the two cases were relatively
mild compared to the controversies over forced busing
that dominated school desegregation efforts during the 1970s and
1980s. Both were the continuation of plans adopted in response
to prior court rulings mandating the desegregation of public schools.
To avoid litigation, Seattle agreed to desegregate its schools
in a 1978 settlement with the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP). After relying heavily on unpopular
compulsory busing of students, the Seattle school district worked
out a compromise plan which allowed high school students to choose
among various schools, but if a school had too many applicants,
the district could use race to determine admission so that each
school would wind up with a ratio of minority students not too
divergent from that in the district as a whole.
Unlike Seattle, a federal district court had determined Louisville
schools to be unlawfully segregated and, in 1975, ordered them
integrated. After going through several plans, in 1996 Louisville,
which has 30 percent black students, settled on one which provided
parents with local schools and choice, so long as no individual
school became over 50 percent or below 15 percent black.
To maintain that balance, the district restricted student transfers.
In 2000, the supervising federal court released the district,
which by then had expanded to all of Jefferson County, from further
supervision, noting that the school district officials treated
the ideal of an integrated system as much more than a legal obligationthey
consider it a positive, desirable policy and an essential element
of any well-rounded public school education.
Both plans were struck down as violations of equal protection.
Robertss plurality decision, joined by Scalia, Thomas and
Alito, holds that race can never be considered when assigning
students to schools unless done as part of an integration plan
to remedy a court finding of deliberate segregation. The fact
that Louisvilles plan was enacted precisely for that purpose
meant nothing, Roberts reasoned, as the 2000 release from court
supervision established that the district was unitary
and no longer in need of integration measures.
Ignoring the continuing impact of racial discrimination, as
well as the distinction between using racial categories to insure
integration rather than to maintain segregation, Roberts absurdly
compared the Seattle and Louisville plans to the pre-Brown
period where schoolchildren were told where they could and
could not go to school based on the color of their skin.
Roberts concluded his opinion with circular logic: The way
to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discrimination
on the basis of race.
Although he too voted to invalidate the Seattle and Louisville
plans, Justice Kennedyconsistent with his role as a slightly
more moderate right-winger than the other four justicesfiled
a separate concurring opinion distancing himself from Robertss
extreme views. Parts of the opinion by the chief justice
imply an all-too-unyielding insistence that race cannot be a factor
in instances when, in my view, it may be taken into account,
Kennedy wrote. The plurality opinion is too dismissive of
the legitimate interest government has in ensuring all people
have equal opportunity regardless of their race.
Because of the 4-1-4 lineup of votes, Justice Kennedys
concurrence is considered controlling. Kennedys opinion
gives little indication of the circumstances which might justify
a school districts consideration of race, however.
Associate Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote a 77-page dissenting
opinion, joined by the three other liberal associate justices,
John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Breyer began by emphasizing that the case arose from the
longstanding efforts of two local school boards to integrate their
public schools, with the intent to bring about the
kind of racially integrated education that Brown v. Board of
Education long ago promised.
After reviewing the history of desegregation struggles since
Brown, Breyer identified three important social interests
in eliminating school segregation: setting right the consequences
of prior conditions of segregation, overcoming the
adverse educational effects produced by and associated with highly
segregated schools, and a democratic element: an interest
in producing an educational environment that reflects the pluralistic
society in which our children will live.
Breyer analyzed each social interest and how five decades of
Supreme Court precedent upheld both voluntary and compulsory
race-conscious measures to combat segregated schools. The Equal
Protection Clause, ratified following the Civil War, has always
distinguished in practice between state action that excludes and
thereby subordinates racial minorities and state action that seeks
to bring together people of all races, Breyer explained.
Answering Robertss crude invocation of Brown,
Breyer wrote that segregation policies did not simply tell
schoolchildren where they could and could not go to school
based on the color of their skin, they perpetuated a caste
system rooted in the institutions of slavery and 80 years of legalized
subordination. The lesson of history is not that efforts to continue
racial segregation are constitutionally indistinguishable from
efforts to achieve racial integration. Indeed, it is a cruel distortion
of history to compare Topeka, Kansas in the 1950s to Louisville
and Seattle in the modern day.
Thomas filed a particularly noxious concurring opinion, in
which he compared Breyers equal protection analysis to that
of the Supreme Court majority in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896),
which sanctioned state-sponsored racial segregation under the
now discredited doctrine of separate but equal. The
segregationists in Brown embraced the arguments the Court
endorsed in Plessy, Thomas wrote. Though Brown
decisively rejected those arguments, todays dissent replicates
them to a distressing extent.
On the other flank, Justice Stevens, after joining with Breyer,
added an individual dissent, decrying as cruel irony
Robertss use of Brown v. School Board to invalidate
integration plans. The Chief Justice fails to note that
it was only black schoolchildren who were told which schools
they could not attend. Indeed, the history books do not
tell stories of white children struggling to attend black schools,
Stevens added.
Noting the extreme right-wing trajectory of the court, Stevensthe
senior justice on the Supreme Court, having been appointed by
Gerald Fordconcluded, It is my firm conviction that
no Member of the Court that I joined in 1975 would have agreed
with todays decision.
There were always severe limitations inherent in the perspective
of achieving racial integration and equality within the framework
of a system based on class exploitation, and the Supreme Court,
as an arm of the capitalist state, could never seriously address
the fundamental social and economic divisions underlying racial
discrimination and oppression.
The June 28 anti-integration decision highlights the inability
of the current capitalist political set-up, under conditions of
increasing social polarization and economic inequality, to defend
even the limited gains of the post-war struggle for civil rights.
The court majority speaks for and sanctions an accelerating assault
on any form of equality.
See Also:
Decisions on campaign finance, speech
and religion
US Supreme Court rulings mark a swing to the right
[28 June 2007]
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