I. Race and “Strict Scrutiny”
1. 1875 Civil Rights Act—the last gasp of the Radical Republicans, the 1875 Civil Rights Act was
introduced by Senator Charles Sumner in an effort to protect the civil
rights of African Americans, which were coming under increasing attack
as the Republican Party determination to protect those rights was
waning.
2. 1883 Civil Rights Cases—the Supreme Court, in a series of decisions that have become known as the Civil Rights Cases,
declared that major portions of the 1875 Civil Rights Act were
unconstitutional, because they attempted to police not only state
actions, but individual actions, as well. This opened the way for a
series of discriminatory practices to come into use, from restrictive
covenants (restricting certain parcels of property from being sold to
certain groups), to permitting owners of hotels, theaters, and
restaurants to refuse service to groups they didn’t like (mainly African
Americans).
3. 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson—the
state of Louisiana passed a law that required railroads operating in
the state had to provide separate railcars for white and African
American passengers. This upset a number of Creoles near New Orleans, especially since the state had also enacted a “One-Drop Rule”
to determine who would be considered African American for the purposes
of these new restrictive laws. Homer Plessy, an “octoroon” (that is, a
person who was 1/8th black), agreed to take part in this test
case, funded in part by railroad companies who objected to the expenses
they would incur to follow this Louisiana law. The Supreme Court in
1896, in its most infamous decision after Scott v. Sandford,
held that as long as accommodations were “equal,” they could be
“separate.” This decision, as well as that handed down in the Civil
Rights Cases, opened the floodgates for similar legislation to be passed
throughout the South (as well as the North), and permitted the
institution of Jim Crow—the American version of apartheid. This largely remained the law of the land until 1954.
4. 1954 Brown v. Topeka Board of Education—in
this momentous decision, a result of several decades of work by the
NAACP’s Legal Defense Team, led by Thurgood Marshall, overturned most of
the previous 75 years worth of legal precedent. The Court found that
African Americans could not be discriminated against in educational
institutions. This led to the Court later deciding to extend these
protections to other realms of life, later striking down restrictive
covenants. The outlawing of private discrimination—including
employment—would await the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
B. Race
as a Suspect Classification—after handing down the Brown decision, any
law passed that made a racial distinction was subject to strict scrutiny
by the courts.
1. Suspect
Classification—this does not mean that the government cannot treat the
races differently; the Court has not held that the Constitution is
“color-blind.” The law may still make racial distinctions as long as the
purpose for those distinctions is to remedy the consequences of past
discrimination.
a. 1968 Green v. New Kent County—the
Court banned a “freedom-of-choice” desegregation plan, and decided that
blacks and white had to actually attend the same school.
b. 1972 Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education—the Court decreed that students may be bused in order to achieve a better racial balance in desegregated schools.
2. Affirmative Action—today,
we associate the term “affirmative action” with other terms, like
“set-aside” or “quotas”; that is, actions taken to “guarantee” a certain
number of positions or contracts will go to members of minority groups.
When the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964, however, it only required
companies to implement plans of their own devising to address past
wrongs that their discriminatory practices had caused.
a. 1970 Philadelphia Plan—suggested
to President Richard M. Nixon by his Secretary of Labor George Schultz,
the policy was meant to serve a dual purpose: to appease some of the
critics of the administration on the issue of race, and to drive a wedge
between Democrats on one of its core constituencies—trade union
members. The Philadelphia Plan required jobs on projects funded by the
federal government to go to workers from minority groups in proportion
to their share of the local population.
b. Education—one
of the hottest of the hot-button issued in the late 1960s and early
1970s was the court-ordered busing of school children to achieve an
integrated school system. The Court found, in several decisions (for
example, see Swan v. Charlotte and Mecklenburg above) that permitting
families to “choose” a school was not good enough, largely because
whites would choose to maintain the status quo, and no change would
happen. The Court in a number of instances, including in Detroit and in
Boston, ordered that school children be bused in order to reach a
standard that approximated what they judged to be “integrated.” In
places like Louisville, Kentucky, that included busing children to and
from the surrounding suburbs, when it was proven to the Court’s
satisfaction that those suburbs had participated in discriminatory
practices. These decisions have been greatly amended in the recent past,
as we will discuss in greater detail below.
i. University of California Regents v. Bakke—Allan
Bakke, a Vietnam War veteran, applied to the medical school at the
University of California-Davis in 1973 and 1974, but was rejected both
years in favor of candidates from minority groups with lower test scored
than Bakke. Bakke sued in court, and won judgment in his favor. The
California Regents, who had recently passed a state-mandated plan to
encourage a larger minority enrollment, countersued, and it is this
countersuit that made its way to the Supreme Court.
c. “Reverse
discrimination”—with this new interpretation of what “affirmative
action” meant, white litigants began to argue that using race as a
criteria in school admissions or job applications—even to address the
wrongs done to African Americans by past discrimination—was “reverse
discrimination.”
i. 1995 Adarand Constructors v. Pena—a
construction company in Colorado that lost out on a subcontract bid to
build guardrails on a highway to a minority-owned firm, sued the
contractor, claiming violation of 5th and 14th Amendment rights—in effect, that they had been victims of reverse discrimination
ii. 2003 University of Michigan Admissions cases—in
a mixed decision, the Court found that, while universities can use race
as one consideration when deciding who to admit, it has to be tailored
to only seek to create greater diversity on campus.
II. Sex and “Reasonable Classification”
A. “Suspect”
v. “Reasonable” Classification—the Court has held that laws that put
women in a special category were made for different purposes than those
which put African Americans in special categories.
1. 1908 Muller v. Oregon—Oregon
passed a law that limited the number of hours a day a woman could work
outside the home to 10 hours (men were permitted to “choose” to work
longer each day) Curt Muller, who owned a laundry that employed large
numbers of women, sued, since he would have to employ more women to
comply with the law, and his costs would appreciate. Louis Brandeis,
future Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, argued that the state had
a compelling interest in limiting the workday of women, because of
their importance to raising future generations. The Court accepted
Brandeis’ argument, and this decision remained largely unchallenged into
the 1970s.
2. 1964 Civil Rights Act—not
only outlawed discrimination on the basis of race, but also on the
basis of color, religion, national origin—or sex. This final clause was
inserted by Virginia senator Harry Smith, an ardent segregationist. His
detractors argued that he did so in the hope of killing the bill; he
insisted it was because of his close relationship with feminist Alice
Paul. At any rate, it was because of the work of Michigan senator Martha
Griffith that the clause remained in the act. With the advent of Title IX, the field of education was added to the list of places where discrimination was outlawed.
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