NEWS
THE HARVARD CRIMSON JUNE 30, 2023
11
PROTESTS IN WASHINGTON
Protesters Rally After Court Decision ACTIVISTS CLASH. Pro- and anti-affirmative action protesters clash in Washington after the Supreme Courtâs ruling.
planned to speak, but both groups were moved away from the courthouse by police due to reports of a âsuspicious package.â The two groups congregated on the edge of the Capitol grounds. At one point, there was a confrontation bet w e e n proand anti-affirmative action demonstrators. Kashish Bastola â26 â who flew to Wa s h i n g t o n from St. Louis Thursday morning â said he had a conversation with an older woman that âescalated really quickly.â âI asked her, âAre you proud of yourself? Do you think youâre representing our community?â And she said she doesnât even identify as South Asian and that she thinks that our country has been ridden by race,â Bastola
BY MICHELLE N. AMPONSAH AND CAM E. KETTLES CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
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ffirmative action supporters and counterprotesters clashed on Capitol Hill on Thursday following the Supreme Courtâs decision effectively striking down affirmative action in higher education. The Supreme Court delivered a severe blow to affirmative action in its 6-2 ruling against Harvard on Thursday, reversing nearly 50 years of precedent. The majority opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts â76, found that Harvardâs and the University of North Carolinaâs race-conscious admission policies violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. Ahead of the Courtâs ruling on affirmative action, student organizers had planned a rally and press conference with several advocacy organizations, including the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Due to poor air quality conditions in Washington on Thursday, the press conference was moved indoors to the Friends Committee on National Legislation building. âOriginally, this wasnât supposed to happen because of the air quality, but we knew we just couldnât stand aside and let SFFA speak for people who are supposed to be students applying and take that narrative,â said Nahla C. Owens â25 of Defend Di-
I donât want universities to think they have a cop-out or an excuse. Theyâre still responsible for ensuring that they have diverse populations on their campuses. Joel O. Crawford â26
Pro-affirmative action protesters held a demonstration at the U.S. Capitol following Thursdayâs decision. JULIAN J. GIORDANOâCRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Anti-affirmative action protesters celebrated the restriction of the use of race in admissions. JULIAN J. GIORDANOâCRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Itâs really important to us that we have student voices in this work because we are the ones who are directly impacted. Elyse G. Martin-Smith â25 Harvard BSA Political Action Chair
versity. Owens said while she was not surprised by the Courtâs decision in the Harvard case, her âheart was sinkingâ when it was announced. âMy grandma had been working hard to desegregate her school district, and to think that the progress she had worked for and that her generation had worked for is now being rolled back is just â itâs like a slap in the face, honestly,â she added. While organizers held the press conference at the FCNL building, students led a protest a block away, at the Capitol. According to Hana R. OâLooney â26, the demonstration was entirely student-organized â a change from the original plan to protest alongside seasoned organizers. âThey decided to move that indoors and they actually said, âNo students allowed,ââ said Elyse G. Martin-Smith â25, the political action chair of the Harvard Black Students Association. âItâs really important to us that we have student voices in this work because we are the ones who are directly impacted,â she said. The Asian American Coalition for Education also held an outdoor press conference just minutes before students
Several Harvard student groups attended protests in Washington following the Supreme Courtâs ruling. JULIAN J. GIORDANOâCRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Activists rallied for Students for Fair Admissions, the group that brought suit against Harvard. JULIAN J. GIORDANOâCRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Students supporting affirmative action flocked to Washington. CAM E. KETTLESâCRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
House of Representatives intern
said. âI think itâs just really sad because if you look around right now youâll clearly see division. And this is exactly what weâve been fighting against,â he added. After the SFFA supporters moved away from the street, student organizers led chants and gave speeches. Student speakers said they would remain committed to holding their schools accountable. âWe need to put pressure not only on the schools that we are a part of,â Martin-Smith said. âPersonally I will be putting a lot of pressure on Harvard. Harvard has so many ways to improve,â she added. âAnd some of those ways include striking down legacy and donor admissions.â Bastola also said that President-elect Claudine Gay and other top Harvard administrators âcan expect continuing conversations on ethnic studies,â âcultural centersâ and âthe incident that happened at Leverett House last school yearâ â referencing an April swatting attack at the dormitory. Though Thursdayâs decision came as a disappointment to affirmative action proponents, students maintained optimism for a way forward. âThere is still a lot of hope because there are other ways that we can evaluate someoneâs identity,â said Dian Yu â26, who also attended the protest. âI do feel like because thereâs still room for people to talk about their identities in their essays, interviews, etcetera, itâs still possible to take into account the ways that people can contribute from all walks of life,â she added. âI still think thereâs a lot we can do,â she added. After news came down of the decision, Joel O. Crawford â26, an intern at the House of Representatives, left work to watch the demonstration. Crawford said he was ânervousâ to see changes in the student body going forward. âEven now after reading it, there is a lot of ambiguity in how schools can operate and how they are allowed to use race even with affirmative action being overturned,â he said. âIt doesnât stop here. I donât want universities to think they have a cop-out or an excuse,â Owens said. âTheyâre still responsible for ensuring that they have diverse populations on michelle.amponsah@thecrimson.com cam.kettles@thecrimson.com