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Kirwan Institute > Research > Research Projects > Affirmative Action Project > Connerly Initiatives > Initiatives Generally

Initiatives Generally

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All of the initiatives are very similar, if not identical. The basic portion of each initiative aims to amend the state constitution to read as follows:

[State Name] Civil Rights Initiative:

The state shall not discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting.

The text of the initiative is misleading. It makes no mention of the fact that it eliminates all state affirmative action programs, and co-opts civil rights movement language for a purpose completely at odds with the goals of that movement.

The initiative has had serious impact on diversity in the states where it has passed. For more information about the impact the initiative has upon diversity in employment, education, and contracting, see the links below.

For more information on Ward Connerly, who his backers are, and how much he is paid for his work, see the informational links below.


Information on Connerly and the Initiatives

Proposition 209 - California

California passed Proposition 209 in 1996, amending the state constitution to ban affirmative action programs in public education, employment and contracting. This ban has significantly decreased minority enrollment in the University of California system, especially the graduate and professional schools. It has also caused an extreme drop in the number of women- and minority-owned businesses; those businesses that survived now receive a much smaller portion of government contracting dollars.


More information on Proposition 209:

The California Coalition to Analyze the Impact of Proposition 209

Impacts of Proposition 209 Fact Sheet


Impact on Higher Education:

Separate But Certainly Not Equal - Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA - April 2004

(E)racing Race, Erasing Access - Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA - November 2005

Admissions and Omissions: How “The Numbers” Are Used to Exclude Deserving Students – Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA – June 2006

“Merit Matters”: Race, Myth, and UCLA Admissions – Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA – September 2006

Diversity Gap Grows in UC Med Schools, Says Report – New America Media – July 22, 2008

UC Regents to Consider Admissions Changes – Los Angeles Daily News – July 15, 2008

Students Recruit Minorities to UC in Ways Institution Can’t – The Mercury News – August 6, 2008

UCLA Accused of Illegal Admissions Practices – Los Angeles Times – August 30, 2008


Impact on Contracting and Employment:

Key Findings: Affirmative Action in Contracting & Employment

Free to Compete? Measuring the Impact of Proposition 209 on Minority Business Enterprises – Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice (UC Berkeley School of Law) – August 2006

A Vision Fulfilled? The Impact of Proposition 209 on Equal Opportunity for Women Business Enterprises – Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice (UC Berkeley School of Law) – September 2007

 

Proposal 2 - Michigan

Michigan passed Proposal 2 in 2006, amending the state constitution to ban affirmative action programs in public education, employment and contracting. Though the complete effects of this most recent ban are not known, the initial results are again discouraging. The University of Michigan reported that its minority enrollment decreased after passage.

In December 2006, several groups, including the ACLU and NAACP, sought a declaratory ruling that interpreting the amendment to bar consideration of race as one among many factors in admissions decisions at public universities violates the Equal Protection clause of the U.S. Constitution. The District Court, however, dismissed the suit in March 2008.


More information on Proposal 2:

Khaled Ali Beydoun, Without Color of Law: The Losing Race Against Colorblindness in Michigan, 12 Mich. J. Race & L. 465 (2007).

The Potential Impact of the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative on Employment, Education, and Contracting - Susan Kaufmann

The Gender Impact of the Proposed Michigan Civil Rights Initiative - Susan Kaufmann and Anne Davis

Student Groups Target Minorities – The Michigan Daily – July 21, 2008

Minority Recruiting Is Paying Off, University of Michigan Asserts - Detroit Free Press - June 13, 2008

Non-Profit Aims to Advance Diversity in Michigan - PR Newswire - June 11, 2008

 

Ward Connerly

Ward Connerly is the spokesperson for these initiatives, which are funded by private donors that have included Rupert Murdoch and John Moores, Sr. Connerly is also a lobbyist for the construction industry. His campaigns have employed deception and outright voter fraud to get the initiative onto the ballot.

More information on Ward Connerly, his backers, and his tactics:

The Big Money Behind Ward Connerly - Lee Cokorinos (Equal Justice Society)

Excerpt, "Good Ole Boys" - Katherine Spillar (Ms. Magazine)

Ward Connerly - Fraudbusters (Ballot Initiative Strategy Center)

Eastern District of Michigan Judicial Opinion - finding that systematic voter fraud was employed by Connerly's campaign