"Since 1996, state universities in California have been barred from any admissions decisions that “discriminat[e] against or grant preferential treatment” to an applicant based on race or ethnicity. This past January a referendum on reversing this policy passed the state senate without controversy. Now, however, the San Jose Mercury News reports that three Asian-American state senators who originally supported the referendum—all Democrats—have asked for it be to tabled. Their request comes after broad-based opposition to the referendum from California’s Asian-American population:
The contention that affirmative action would create racial quotas in college admissions preys on Asian parents’ anxieties, said Henry Der, a former state deputy secretary of education who directed the organization Chinese Affirmative Action until the mid-1990s. “I think certain negative forces are trying to exploit it and stir up this fear,” Der said
Der said one of the culprits is Senate Republican Leader Bob Huff, who argued at a packed town hall meeting in Cupertino last month that the percentage of Asian-American undergraduates across the UC system — now about 38 percent — could plummet if the ban was lifted. Der and Huff were both panelists at the meeting [...]
“These Chinese families are not looking at the larger picture. We are not making the investments we need in higher education,” he said. “We need to expand opportunities for all students.”
The conflict between Asian-Americans (“these Chinese families” as Der puts it) and African-Americans over affirmative action pits two key Democratic constituencies against one another. "...
Great question. Is it fair to require one minority to have SAT scores twice anothers just to get into the institution?
And is it fair to the university to accept so many who aren't up to normal standards, essentially social promotion at a college level.
Thomas Sowell: There are no solutions, just trade-offs.