Michigan Affirmative-Action Measure Is All Wrong: Gene Sperling
Commentary by Gene Sperling
Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- There is everything wrong and nothing
right with Michigan's Nov. 7 ballot initiative to amend the state
constitution to ban affirmative action.
Rather than root out flawed affirmative-action programs, the
amendment -- the Orwellian-named Michigan Civil Rights Initiative
-- is a diversity sledgehammer.
The measure would wipe off the Michigan map the most
compelling, carefully designed efforts to address racial and
gender imbalances. Doing so would handcuff Michigan's -- and
ultimately the nation's -- ability to confront our most
compelling economic challenges in at least two important ways.
First, the MCRI would impede our capacity to deal with
projected skills gaps in our workforce. A bipartisan Aspen
Institute report, led by David Ellwood, dean of Harvard
University's John F. Kennedy School of Government, found that the
U.S. pool of workers aged 25-64, which grew 44 percent over the
last 20 years, won't expand in the next 20. Meanwhile, blacks,
Hispanics and women -- groups underrepresented in the areas of
science and engineering -- will make up a bigger proportion of
our workforce.
To increase the pool of skilled workers in areas critical to
our economy, we need an all-out national effort to boost the
percentages of women and minorities who want degrees in science,
engineering and math.
Around the nation, innovative programs that seek to close
these skills gaps have already cropped up. Sally Ride, the first
U.S. female astronaut in space, has started a nationwide network
of clubs and camps that exposes girls to the sciences.
Banned in Michigan
The Young Women's Leadership Charter School of Chicago,
which opened in 2000, offers an intensive sciences curriculum for
its mostly black female students. It was ranked first among
Chicago public schools last year in its five-year graduation
rate.
Wayne State University in Detroit has developed a two-year
program to increase the graduation rates of its Latino students
by offering tutoring, counseling, and cultural-education
programs. The University of Michigan hosts visits by local
schools with high minority-student enrollment to encourage more
to aspire to a college degree.
Based on the interpretation of measures similar to the MCRI
that were passed in Washington state and in California, all
efforts to encourage minorities and women to seek college and
technical degrees would be banned in Michigan if they had any
government involvement.
Susan Kaufmann, associate director of the University of
Michigan's Center for the Education of Women, says programs that
encourage women and minority-owned businesses to compete for
local-government contracts could be eliminated.
Business Backing
Second, the MCRI ignores the business case for diversity,
made by Fortune 500 companies in an amicus brief filed in the
U.S. Supreme Court case Grutter v. Bollinger that unsuccessfully
challenged the University of Michigan Law School's policy of
considering race as one factor in admissions.
As the Fortune 500 brief says, ``today's global marketplace
and the increasing diversity in the American population demand
cross-cultural experience and understanding.''
For our nation's businesses, competing in the global economy
places a premium not only on diverse workforces, but on workers
who can thrive in racially and ethnically diverse contexts. This
point is critical because it underscores the fact that a diverse
student body benefits both minority and white students by giving
everyone the chance to form friendships with those from different
geographic, ethnic and racial backgrounds.
`The Highest Importance'
Even George Washington recognized the benefit of diversity
in universities when he argued in 1796 that establishing a
National University would be ``of the highest importance''
because ``young men from different parts of the United States
would be assembled together, and would by degrees discover that
there was not that cause for jealousies and prejudices which one
part of the Union had imbibed against another part.''
Supporters of the MCRI, such as its author Ward Connerly,
chairman of the American Civil Rights Institute, believe that we
should see the slightest consideration of racial diversity as the
moral and legal equivalent of our most pernicious past practices
of discrimination. Yet, our shameful history of excluding,
segregating and imposing second-class citizenship on minorities
shouldn't be used as a rationale to handcuff universities from
taking steps to ensure a racially diverse student body.
Not surprisingly, under the MCRI, universities would still
be able to award preferences for linebackers, legacies, children
of big donors, and those from remote states. In the name of civil
rights, the only steps that a college couldn't take to increase
diversity would be the type designed to improve racial
understanding, to ensure a diverse learning environment, and to
address underrepresentation in critical sectors of our workforce.
The MCRI is wrong on understanding our history, wrong on the
meaning of civil rights and wrong for the economic needs of both
Michigan and for the U.S.
(Gene Sperling, author of ``The Pro-Growth Progressive,''
was President Bill Clinton's top economic adviser. He is a senior
fellow at the Center for American Progress. The opinions
expressed are his own.)
To contact the writer of this column:
Gene Sperling in Washington at
gsperling@cfr.org.
Last Updated: November 3, 2006 04:40 EST