Our Focus Areas
Affirmative Action
Education
Preferences in College Admission
Where does President Bush stand on racial preferences? | Where does President Bush stand on racial preferences? |
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In 1998 the Campaign for a Colorblind America commissioned a Candidate Questionnaire on race and sent it to every statewide candidate in Texas. The following are the responses of then Texas Governor George Bush. This questionnaire seeks to determine your position on issues of government action in the area of race and opportunity in the United States today.
1. The vestiges of racial discrimination in our society require the federal government to classify and favor individuals on the basis of race and ethnicity.
2. Police officers should be able to take race into account in deciding whom to question and detain for the purposes of preventing crime.
3. The State Legislature should enact a law that would ban discrimination and preferences on the basis of race, color, sex, ethnicity and national origin in the operation of public employment and public contracting.
4. Race-based "affirmative action" should be replaced with class- or need- based affirmative action or a system based on merit only.
5. The federal government should classify and favor individuals on the basis of race and ethnicity when that furthers diversity in contracting and employment.
6. In drawing electoral districts, increasing the number of election districts that are likely to elect a minority candidate is more important than maintaining compact, community-based districts.
7. No recent immigrant of any race should benefit from "affirmative action" or racial preferences because they have not faced a history of discrimination in the United States.
8. Since educational and economic disparities between the races are so pronounced, it is important that the government "level the playing field" by using race-based "affirmative action" to help people get ahead.
9. For the sake of obtaining a diversity of viewpoints and experiences, public educational institutions should be allowed to consider the race and ethnicity of applicants.
10. Whether we like it or not, "color-blind" government policies are unfair and unrealistic given the disparities between the races in America today. |
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