Posted on November 27, 2006

Affirmative Action Era Is Over, Longtime Foe Says

Richard C. Paddock, L.A. Times, Nov. 26, 2006

As Ward Connerly sees it, the demise of affirmative action in America is fast approaching.

Buoyed by the victory this month of the Michigan ballot measure banning racial preferences in public education and hiring, the former University of California regent is ready to take his crusade to the rest of the nation.

Connerly talks enthusiastically of an “anti-affirmative action wave washing over America” that will wipe out the race-based preferences used for decades to help African Americans, Latinos and other disadvantaged ethnic groups.

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For his next target, the conservative activist is considering sponsoring a ballot measure in one or more states, including Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Missouri or South Dakota. “We don’t have to go to every state if we can get a critical mass of seven or eight states,” he says.

Connerly, who is of African American, Native American and Caucasian heritage, has been fighting race-based preferences since the mid-1990s, a role that has won him fame in some quarters, infamy in others. He argues that no one in America should receive preference in education, jobs or government contracts because of skin color or gender.

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Connerly and his allies in Michigan faced formidable opposition.

The measure was opposed by Democratic and Republican leaders, labor unions, the Catholic Church, major media outlets and the university. Former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) also came out against it.

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Among those who endorsed the measure was the Ku Klux Klan. Connerly added to the controversy when he said of the endorsement: “If the Ku Klux Klan thinks that equality is right, God bless them. Thank them for finally reaching the point where logic and reason are being applied instead of hate.”

Connerly later issued a statement to clarify his remarks, noting that he had always disdained the KKK and that he hoped the group would “move beyond its ugly history.”

In the end, Michigan voters easily approved Proposal 2 on Nov. 7 by a margin of 58% to 42%.

Connerly has long antagonized many black leaders with his views and his ability to attract the spotlight.

He acknowledges that a white person expressing the same ideas would be branded a racist.

He calls his ballot initiatives civil rights measures and named his organization the American Civil Rights Initiative.

His group receives funding from conservative groups, such as the Sarah Scaife Foundation, and from individual donors whom he did not identify for fear that it would expose them to charges of racism.

Some African American leaders see Connerly as a sell-out acting at the behest of his conservative sponsors.

They maintain that affirmative action, which began in the 1960s, is an essential step in helping blacks, Latinos and Native Americans overcome generations of discrimination that have left them at a disadvantage in obtaining an education or a job.

“I am inclined to see him as an opportunist, someone who is supported by wealthy backers and is primarily interested in protecting the privileged, not the underprivileged,” said Darnell Hunt, a professor of sociology and director of the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA.

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But Connerly says that he is his own man and passionately argues that affirmative action is a misguided program that is fundamentally unfair and stigmatizes successful blacks who can succeed without it. And the role of public universities, he says, is not to provide opportunities for students but to produce a skilled workforce.

Connerly acknowledges that Proposition 209 has reduced the number of African Americans admitted to some UC campuses but says the real problem for blacks is not the lack of race preferences.

One reason for the decline in enrollment, he says, is the desire of many black students to attend black colleges, where they can experience being in the majority. Responsibility also lies with African American parents who do not value education or do not push their children to go to university, he says.

In addition, he says, some black community high schools that are run by black administrators do a poor job of preparing students for college.

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Connerly said the overwhelming victory of Proposal 2 in Michigan at the same time that the state voted largely Democratic in other contests was a sign that anti-affirmative action measures could prevail anywhere in the country.

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