Putting An End To Race-Based Hiring Is 30 Years Past Due – The Federalist

Posted: January 23, 2024 at 5:44 pm

The corporate media are just now discovering what I learned in 2015, that theFederal Aviation Administration (FAA), under the direction of President Barack Obama, hires air traffic controllers (ATC) on the basis of race.Of course, President Biden, as part of his commitment to equity, took it further.His FAA identified certain disabilities as deserving of special emphasis in recruitment and hiring, including epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, [and] psychiatric disability.

How in the world did it come to this?

Twenty-nine years ago this week, I argued before the Supreme Court of the United States that the federal governments policy of using race to award contracts was unconstitutional.My client, Randy Pech of Colorado Springs, was a college dropout who had parlayed his fathers retirement monies no bank would loan him funds into a small business building guardrails along federal highways.Although his was the lowest bid on a national forest job in southwestern Colorado and he had a reputation for doing excellent work on a timely basis, he was denied the subcontract because a federal agency awarded the prime contractor a $10,000 bonus to give the job to a minority-owned business.

Forty-one years after the Supreme Court ruled regarding public schools in Washington, D.C., it would be unthinkable that the same Constitution would impose a lesser duty on the Federal Government than on the states, and the solicitor general argued just that:Congress owed no duty to my client to adhere to the Constitutions equal protection guarantee.

The court disagreed. In fact, I was there that spring when Justice OConnor read her5-4 ruling, which held:[A]ny person, of whatever race, has the right to demand that any governmental actor subject to the Constitution justify any racial classification subjecting that person to unequal treatment

The holding was a bombshell.It led the network news that night and appeared on the front page, above the fold, of every newspaper in the country.Race-based decision-making, affirmative action, or reverse discrimination was doomed, declared all the legal experts.

Today, with federal agencies like the FAA hiring on the basis of race, Ivy League universities appointing presidents due to the color of their skin, corporations all but declaring that white males (like my client who was once called an angry white man) need not apply, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) everywhere run amok, what happened to the 1995 ruling my client won inAdarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pea?

Because, in Justice OConnors words, the court had alter[ed] the playing field, my client was sent back to Colorado federal district court for it to rule anew, given the courts holding that the Constitutions equal protection guarantee applied to the federal government.

In 2000, the courtunanimously swatted asidean attempt by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit to kill the case; thus, in 2001, I was back before the court.On their way out the door, Clinton administration lawyers argued the case was ripe for a ruling, but President George W. Bushs lawyers argued it was moot.In the wake of the attack of 9/11,the court agreed. During oral argument, I vowed to return to enforce the courts 1995 holding.

In 2003, I did return on behalf of a Denver small businessman, but by then Justice OConnor had lost her way.On the recommendation of retired generals and admirals, corporate CEOs, and university poohbahs,she allowed colleges to grant admission based on race for no more than 25 more years.Not surprisingly, over a vigorousdissentby Justice Scalia, joined by the chief justice, my clients petition forwritofcertiorariwas rejected.

Meanwhile, in the wake of my 1995 victory, Congress considered whether to end itspolicyof doing business based on race.After two years, with bipartisan support, Congress voted to leave the issue up to the courts.Then, in 2015, after I sued the FAA for hiring air traffic controllers based on race, Congress declined to end the program, which continues even today.In 2021, albeit with not a single Republican vote, Congress enacted the American Rescue Plan Act, which granted Covid relief to restauranteurs, but only those of certain enumerated races.Fortunately, that misadventure ended after federal court rulings, including bythe U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, that it was unconstitutional, citingAdarand.

Meanwhile, the American people expressed their disdain for racial quotas.In 1996, California passed theCalifornia Civil Rights Initiative(Proposition 209), modeled after the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which ended race-based hiring, contracting, and admissions in the Golden State.In 1998,Washington state did the same.In both instances, voters rejected the urgings of their states political, business, and media elites, which were brought to them via slick, expensive advertising campaigns.In fact, in 2020,Californians once again voted No to government race-based decision-making.

Fortunately, OConnors disastrous 2003 ruling inGrutterdid not live out its 25-year sentence. Last year, Chief Justice Robertsall but overruledGrutterby ending race-based admissions by colleges and universities.That good news was long overdue. However, that was not all the chief justice got right.

In 2007, he declared, The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.Time to do so is well past due, but it will not occur with President Biden and the current Congress.

Given illegal immigration, inflation, and imminent global war, the American people have many reasons to vote the bums out.Add racial politics, racial divisiveness, and the radical end to Americas meritocracy, and the path forward becomes clear.

A new president in 2025 must end DEI and all race-based hiring and decision-making by federal departments and agencies.Meanwhile, Congress must codify the Supreme Courts ruling inAdarandand compel the federal government to comply with the Constitutions equal protection guarantee.To paraphrase Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., it is the only way to pay the promissory note set forth in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

Mr. Pendley, a Wyoming attorney and Colorado-based, public-interest lawyer for three decades, served in the Reagan administration and led the Bureau of Land Management for President Donald Trump.

Follow this link:

Putting An End To Race-Based Hiring Is 30 Years Past Due - The Federalist

Related Posts