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Biden sides with Harvard on admissions

Responding to US Supreme Court鈥檚 request for its position, administration agrees the university鈥檚 affirmative action tools meet existing constitutional standards

Published on
December 9, 2021
Last updated
December 9, 2021
Gates at Harvard University

The Biden administration has sided with Harvard University in聽defending its聽admissions policies, telling the US聽Supreme Court that the聽institution鈥檚 affirmative action practices fit within the top court鈥檚 existing precedents.

鈥淣either the district court鈥檚 factual findings nor the court of聽appeals鈥 application of聽this court鈥檚 precedents to聽those findings warrant further review,鈥 the US Department of聽Justice said in .

Harvard has argued that it allows the race of its applicants some consideration, but not as a deciding factor, in its admissions policies, complying with a standard practice in US higher education that the Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed as constitutional.

In a case first brought in 2014, Harvard won at the trial level in 2018, and again on appeal last year.

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The plaintiff, a conservative group known as Students for Fair Admissions, has pursued similar actions against other institutions, also unsuccessfully. The University of North Carolina won its聽case at the trial level in October.

Yet the group鈥檚 president, Edward Blum, has held out the possibility that the Supreme Court, after gaining a six-to-three conservative majority during the Trump administration, might decide to revise its past precedents.

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鈥淚t is to be hoped,鈥 Mr Blum said after the Biden position was announced, 鈥渢hat the Supreme Court accepts the Harvard and University of聽North Carolina cases and ends the polarising, unfair and unconstitutional use of race in college admissions.鈥

The Supreme Court, which asked the administration in June for its position, is expected to announce early next year whether it will review the case or allow Harvard鈥檚 win at trial to聽stand.

Harvard, in a statement, said it hopes that the Biden administration鈥檚 argument in its favour ends the matter. 鈥淣ow is聽not the time to reverse the unequivocal decisions of two federal courts reinforcing 40聽years of Supreme Court precedent,鈥 the university said.

paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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