What CEO has been up to …

Roger CleggUncategorized

We recently prepared this one-page summary of the Center for Equal Opportunity’s activities over the past year, and thought that we ought to share it with you. 2013-2014 CEO Activities Report In addition to our speaking (on campuses, coordinating other conservative groups, and with a wide variety of media) and writing (in National Review Online and other magazines, newspapers, and publications), here are just a few highlights of CEO’s work this past year.  We continue to get unmatched bang for the buck. Schuette v. BAMN – The full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit had held that Michigan’s …

Dodd-Frank “Diversity”

Roger CleggUncategorized

On Friday a number of Obama administration agencies with financial-sector regulatory responsibilities jointly published in the Federal Register a proposed “Policy Statement Establishing Joint Standards for Assessing the Diversity Policies and Practices of Entities Regulated by the Agencies.”  The statement comes as a result of Section 342 of the Dodd-Frank legislation, which requires these agencies each to “establish an Office of Minority and Women Inclusion” that, in turn, is to develop diversity and inclusion standards for workplaces and contracting. The proposed statement is even worse than the bill itself, since it aggressively applies not only to the agencies themselves but also to all …

The Supreme Court Returns!

Roger CleggUncategorized

The Supreme Court is back this week, and on its docket are two cases the Center for Equal Opportunity helped persuade the Court to hear.  This comes on the heels, of course, of the important role that CEO played in two important civil-rights cases from last term:  Fisher v. University of Texas and Shelby County v. Holder.  It’s been a busy time for us.  But on to this term’s cases. *          *          * The first case is Schuette v. By Any Means Necessary (BAMN).   The full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit held that Michigan’s Proposal 2 violates …

Constitution Day

Roger CleggUncategorized

Last week I spoke at the Cato Institute’s celebration of Constitution Day (September 17) about the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Shelby County v. Holder.  The Center for Equal Opportunity had played an important role in this case, in which the Supreme Court struck down the coverage formula for Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.  We had urged the Court to take the case, urged it to strike down Section 5 — and, indeed, we had testified before Congress in 2006 that the law should not be reauthorized in the first place.   We pointed out that, in addition to …

Bowdoin and Against For Discrimination

Roger CleggUncategorized

Below is my review of Randall Kennedy’s new book, For Discrimination:  Race, Affirmative Action, and the Law, which appeared on National Review Online.  But first, I wanted to note also that the always formidable Harvey Mansfield recently provided his take on the National Association of Scholar’s important Bowdoin study, and that prompted an exchange between him and the school’s professor Paul Franco here in the Claremont Review of Books.  The Bowdoin study – documenting the political correctness and progressive politics run amok at that school – continues to have an impact and, one hopes, will prompt some real soul-searching at …

Two Down, Two to Go

Roger CleggUncategorized

Here’s a slightly expanded version of an op-ed of mine that the Washington Times published last week: While 50 years ago this week, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., expressed his dream that our children not be judged by “the color of their skin,” that vision is not yet a reality. Racial preferences are used in four principal areas:  employment, contracting, education, and voting. The Supreme Court has just handed down important decisions in the latter two categories.  In Fisher v. University of Texas, it has ruled that the strict scrutiny given to racial preferences in university admissions must indeed be …

More on the 50th Anniversary of “I Have a Dream”

Roger CleggUncategorized

I was asked by National Review Online last week for commentary on the commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the 1963 “March on Washington” and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s culminating “I Have a Dream” speech there.  Here they are. Keeping Things in Perspective This Week:  So, how much of what Dr. King was asking for 50 years ago has been delivered? Well, to help put things in perspective, here is the paragraph in his “I Have a Dream” speech where he spells out his movement’s agenda most specifically: Related posts: TESTIMONY OF ROGER CLEGG, PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL, CENTER FOR EQUAL OPPORTUNITY BEFORE THE U.S. …

Beware Claims of “Racial Profiling”

Roger CleggUncategorized

In light of this week’s dubious court decision on New York City’s police department and racial profiling, it’s worth noting that some members of Congress are reintroducing that hardy (but never passed) perennial, the “End Racial Profiling Act,” which purportedly aims to end racial profiling by law-enforcement officers. This time around, the sponsors are trying to tie it in with, naturally, Trayvon Martin — even though the bill has nothing to do with the George Zimmerman case, since whatever you think of George Zimmerman and whatever he did, he is not a law-enforcement officer. In my statement before the Senate Judiciary Committee about the bill last …

Those New Voting-Rights Lawsuits by Eric Holder

Roger CleggUncategorized

Here’s an article that Hans von Spakovsky of the Heritage Foundation and I wrote for National Review Online about the new voting-rights lawsuits that Attorney General Eric Holder has promised: The Washington Post reports that Eric Holder plans to file voting-rights challenges not only against Texas, which the DOJ did last month, but against a number of other states, too. These challenges are part of a crusade to, as Holder says, “use every tool” at the Obama administration’s disposal to continue federal oversight of the states in this area, despite the Supreme Court’s decision last month in Shelby County v. …

If/then on race relations

Roger CleggUncategorized

If we really want to diminish racial disparities in crime (which leads to racial profiling), If we really want to diminish racial disparities in education (which leads to university admission preferences), If we really want to diminish racial disparities in all kinds of other areas (income, wealth, employment, school discipline, you name it), If we really want to diminish all the racial disparities that, like it or not, make it hard to get rid of the remaining prejudice in this country – Then the single most important thing we can do is lower the out-of-wedlock rate for African Americans, which …