Affirmative action should not be a black-and-white issue

Kahlenberg, Richard

Straight Talk on Race President Clinton’s ongoing national dialogue on race relations may be laudable, but it will do little good unless Americans can break free ji-om the simplistic fomzulas...

...Senate, opponents successfully blocked Bill Lann Lee’s confirmation as assistant attorney general for civil rights, but in the House of Representatives, an attempt to curtail affirmative action went down to defeat in committee...
...Along the way, the book explodes various myths held by both sides of the affirmative action controversy...
...Where 56 percent of whites support tax breaks to businesses “locating in largely black areas,” 79 percent support such breaks “for locating in poor and high-unemployment areas...
...They do find, as one would expect, that there is strong opposition to affirmative action among the most bigoted whites...
...They note that in a study conducted in Great Britain, white respondents provided weak support for employment quotas for blacks and Asians (1.5 percent) and for women (23 percent), but very substantial support for employment quotas for the disabled (8.5 percent...
...Of the book‘s four central findings, the first three are likely to disturb proponents of affirmative action, while the fourth will unsettle opponents...
...And elsewhere in the book, they make clear why class-based preferences would in fact be more morally appealing than race-based preferences: Middle-class African-Americans, they point out, “are now decisively better off than poor blacks and poor whites...
...When the affirmative action question appears first in the survey, the mere mention makes the percentage of whites agreeing with negative stereotypes about blacks increase: that “most blacks are lazy” rises from 20 percent to 31 percent and that “most blacks are irresponsible” rises from 26 percent to 43 percent...
...it follows, in our view, that those who are badly off should be given priority over members of the middle class, regardless of race.’’ Public opinion supports need-based policies more readily than race-or gender-based policies, but the most powerful inyerest groups are organized around racial and gender identities...
...On the whole, however, the findings outlined in Reaching Beyond Race provide some powerful evidence that over time we are likely to see a shifting away from race- and gender-based preferences to programs more broadly addressed to those in need-regardless of their color or gender...
...the fact that white liberals are often covertly angry about racial preferences means continuing support for preferences is even more fragile than we thought...
...Finding #2: Racism plays a very small role in white opposition to affirmative action...
...And the bottom line is, the fact that race preferences can actually exacerbate racism should give pause to those who support affirmative action as a tool for fostering better race relations...
...He noted, “Politically and substantively you’ll help more people and build more unity by having an economic basis for social policy now...
...Did someone slip Reaching Beyond Race to the president before the event...
...The authors argue that a need-based approach is more powerful, “not because it evades the reach of prejudice but because it calls into play the principle of a fairness-that all who need help should be helped, regardless of their race.’’ Polls show, the authors note, that when policies are framed in nonracial terms, the level of support increases...
...They argue: “Class-based affirmative action is just as vulnerable as race-based to the root objection of selecting less qualified applicants in favor of more qualified ones...
...The authors find that opposition to racial preferences is decidedly not part of a larger conservative opposition to all programs aimed at racial and economic inequality: In fact, there is strong support, they find, for “policies to assist the badly off, both black and white, provided that political leaders base their appeal on moral principles that reach beyond race...
...The unfairness is no less, and the resentment will be no less...
...Even among those I percent of American whites most tolerant, 80 percent oppose race preferences in hiring...
...The two groups were divided equally by education, levels of prejudice, social background, and political outlook...
...And Kahlenberg find intriguing euidence to support his proposal in a new book by Paul Snideman and Pdward G. Carmines...
...The experiment involves varying the order of only one question in a survey of more than 100 questions, yet triggers a statistically significant jump in white hostility...
...This, the president said, was “the nub of the affirmative action debate...
...77 percent), school and preschool spending (91 percent vs...
...While the finding is surprising on one level, the authors say, it is consistent with the view that there is a liberal reason to oppose affirmative action-a moral opposition to unequal treatment based on race...
...But they also find that the most tolerant whites are opposed to affirmative action preferences...
...Finding #4: Opposition to race-based affirmative action preferences is countered by strong support for helping disadvantaged people generally...
...Affirmative action should not be a black-and-white issue by Richard D. Kahlenberg SINCE 1994 AMERICA'S 30year experiment with affirmative action has clearly been in jeopardy, but the struggle over its final outcome is anything but predictable...
...The list consisted of the following: “the federal government increasing the tax on gasoline...
...Pollsters find that when asked directly, white liberals are much more likely to support preferential affirmative action than wh: qte conservatives, but, the authors wondered, is this true because white liberals say what is politically correct rather than what they really think...
...The authors, political science professors Paul M. Sniderman of Stanford and Edward G. Carmines of Indiana University, employ a number of tricks to help us determine what Americans really think about race and affirmative action...
...professional athletes getting million-dollar-plus salaries...
...Some proponents of affirmative action explain white opposition as simply another manifestation of white racism...
...While affirmative action surely promotes some degree of racial harmony by integrating workplaces and universities, the prefeential nature of the program also appears to have an unintended consequence, the authors find: White resentment over affirmative action seems to spill over into white attitudes toward blacks generally...
...Looking only at the 25 percent of the [white] public whose attitudes toward blacks is most favorable, we discovered that opposition to affirmative action in this group is overwhelming, with between 7 and 8 out of every 10 objecting to it...
...Finding #3 Instead of healing the racial divide, affirmative action appears to contribute to racial prejudice among whites...
...Opponents of race and gender preferences declared victory when a California initiative banning preferences was approved in 1996, only to suffer defeat on a similar referendum in Houston in 1997 In the U.S...
...For the other half of respondents, the order of the questions is reversed, and individuals are asked first about affirmative action, and then what they think of blacks...
...RICHARD D. KAHLENBERG, a fellow at the Center for National Policy, is author of The Remedy: Class, race, and Affirmative Action and is writing a book on economic desegregation of public schools...
...large corporations polluting the environment.’’ The other randomly sampled half, demographically identical to the first half, was read the same list with a fourth item added: “black leaders aslung the government for affirmative action...
...The finding that Americans also have a reservoir of good will-a strong desire to do something to help those left behind-suggests that voters would like to replace racial preferences with a positive need-based program...
...46 percent...
...Perhaps the authors believe that any deviation from “merit” is unpopular, but their own data show that, when it comes to preferences, “it obviously can make a difference who is to be helped...
...Moreover, in Houston and in the Piscataway case, we have seen evidence of strong business support for the status quo on affirmative action...
...Straight Talk on Race President Clinton’s ongoing national dialogue on race relations may be laudable, but it will do little good unless Americans can break free ji-om the simplistic fomzulas that define the current debate...
...Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, for example, likens opposition to racial preference in the late 1990s to opposition to Brown v. Board of Education in the 1950s...
...I’ Sniderman and Carmines present no data to support this contention...
...76 percent), and increasing taxes for education (65 percent vs...
...Richard Kahlenberg makes an original argument that in order for afimative action to be both effective and popular it must be refocused to correct the disparities between the classes instead of those between the races...
...The following two reviews are an important step in that direction...
...One-half of a random sample of whites was read a list of three items, and asked to name how many items make them angry (but not which ones...
...In the “Mere Mention Experiment,” originally presented by Sniderman in a 1993 book, The Scar of Race (coauthored with Thomas Piazza), the researchers ask one half of a group of respondents what they think of blacks, and subsequently ask a question about affirmative action...
...Surprisingly, the authors do not follow their argument to its logical conclusion, and oppose, rather than support, class-based preferences in such areas as college admissions...
...But Sniderman and Carmines find: “Race prejudice, far from dominating and orchestrating the opposition to affirmative action, makes only a slight contribution to it.’’ Using data from the 1992 National Election Studies survey on white attitudes toward blacks, the authors separate whites by tolerance level...
...The fact that racism is not at the root of opposition to affirmative action means further education is unlikely to shift public opinion...
...The argument on behalf of class-based preferences in college admissions is even stronger, for an SAT score of 12.50 surely means something more if achieved by a poor white or black student who lives in poverty and attends inferior schools than if achieved by a wealthy student with highly educated parents and private tutors...
...In order to understand the true feelings of liberals, Sniderman and Carmines devised what they call the “List Experiment...
...Opponents of preferences appeared to be headed for a big win when the Supreme Court agreed to hear a ‘case involving the use of race in layoffs, but a coalition of big business and civil rights groups prevented the case, Piscataway v. Eman, from being heard by financing an out-of-court settlement...
...The great national debate over affirmative action is turning out to be more complex than we thought...
...Under the current legal regime, businesses can be sued by people of color and women for discrimination, but are unlikely to lose reverse-discrimination suits filed by white males...
...While Sniderman and Carmines provide compelling polling data on an array of affirmative action questions, the book does not and cannot fully explain the tug of war over preferential policies, for the complete story requires a discussion of interest group politics...
...65 percent of Democrats and 64 percent of Republicans...
...Finding #I: Deep down, white liberal Democrats are as opposed to racial preferences as white Republican conservatives...
...Next, Scott Shugm explains how Lou Cannon’s ji-esh new reporting on the Rodney King beating willforce readers to rethink their assumptions about the true meaning of that infamous event...
...The most intriguing moment of President Clinton’s recent town hall meeting on race in Akron, Ohio, came when the president raised the question of whether class-based affirmative action could replace race-based preferences...
...When policies are framed in terms of race-neutral need as opposed to race-specific criteria, support among whites increases for college scholarships for good students (94 percent vs...
...By subtracting the number of items identified by the second group as contrasted with the first, the experiment reveals substantial covert white liberal anger about affirmative action: 57 percent of white liberals are angry about affirmative action compared to 50 percent of conservative...
...If the current rules tilt away from affirmative action-and employers are left equally vulnerable to discrimination and reverse-discrimination suits- the risk of legal liability increases dramatically...
...Where public opinion supports need-based policies more readily than race- or gender-based policies, today the most powerful interest groups are organized around racial and gender identities rather than around economic status, so the transition to need-based programs will be heavily resisted...
...Publication of a fascinating new book, Reaching Beyond Race, should help us understand the increasingly complicated affirmative action discussion...

Vol. 30 • January 1998 • No. 1


 
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