
EDITORIAL
LOS ANGELES TIMES
TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1995
A New Tack on Affirmative Action
Gingrich rightly warns against using the issue to divide Americans
Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) is breaking ranks with many in his party who seek
to dismantle affirmative action. The Speaker of the House, mindful of the
divisive potential of the issue, instead is pursuing a more thoughtful course
that focuses on how to change affirmative action while continuing to protect
civil rights. He deserves credit for his reasoned approach and his new understanding.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.), once a staunch supporter of affirmative
action, continues to press legislation that would end all consideration
of race or gender in awarding federal contracts. The cur rent law, contrary
to popular perception, already outlaws quotas except in rare cases in which
the courts have mandated one specifically to remedy proven discrimination.
Gingrich was expected to take a route in the House similar to Dole's in
the Senate, but he now says he will not. He explained why on the Monday
telecast of NBC's "Today" show. He spoke of what he had learned
about this controversial subject in the last six months. Gingrich now acknowledges
" ... the legitimate fear of African Americans who look back only 30
years ago to segregation, to state police who were beating people like John
Lewis [then a young civil rights leader, now a Democratic House member from
Georgia], and you can sense the legitimate, genuine fear we could slide
back into that kind of environment."
Gingrich framed his argument only in terms of blacks; he should remember,
however, that white women have been the biggest beneficiaries of federal
affirmative action policies.
Gingrich remains opposed to racial quotas and set-asides. But he just as
strongly insists that "Republicans have an obligation to reach out
much more emphatically and more strongly to the black community and find
ways: to communicate that we will in fact be protecting civil rights that
we're not going to block-grant civil rights and, the federal government
is going to stand firmly committed against discrimination. "
It seems that fewer and fewer politicians, both Republicans and Democrats,
acknowledge those legitimate' concerns, or the need for continued federal
vigilance against gender and racial discrimination; current statistics show
that women and minorities continue to lag in hiring and especially in promotions.
The Speaker certainly is no fan o f affirmative action. What's important
is his recognition that the federal government has an obligation to en sure
equal opportunity for all Americans. That cannot be done by strip ping away
affirmative action and replacing it with nothing but good intentions.
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- Carl Gutierrez-Jones,
- Department of English
- University of California
- Santa Barbara, CA 93106
- E-mail: carlgj@humanitas.ucsb.edu