Supreme Court stance on Naval Academy's admissions if heard by end of 2025?
Uphold current policy • 25%
Strike down policy • 25%
Remand to lower court • 25%
Dismiss case • 25%
Supreme Court decision and opinion documents
Judge Upholds Naval Academy's Race-Based Admissions, Citing National Security
Dec 6, 2024, 06:21 PM
A federal judge in Maryland ruled on Friday that the U.S. Naval Academy may continue to consider race as a factor in its admissions process, upholding the institution's race-conscious admissions policies. The decision rejects a challenge brought by Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA), the conservative legal group led by Edward Blum that successfully sued to end affirmative action at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina in a landmark Supreme Court case earlier this year. That Supreme Court decision had explicitly carved out an exception for military academies, declining to address their admissions policies. In his ruling, the judge emphasized that achieving diversity within the Naval Academy's student body is a matter of national security, stating that a diverse military is stronger, more effective, and more widely respected. The court declined to extend the Supreme Court's decision, which barred civilian colleges from employing similar affirmative action policies, to the military academies. Attorneys for the Naval Academy argued that diversity is essential for the development of future military leaders. SFFA has vowed to appeal the decision, potentially taking the case to the Supreme Court.
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American Civil Liberties Union • 25%
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Students for Fair Admissions • 25%
NAACP Legal Defense Fund • 25%
U.S. Coast Guard Academy • 25%
U.S. Military Academy (West Point) • 25%
U.S. Air Force Academy • 25%
Other • 25%
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Other federal court • 25%
4th Circuit Court of Appeals • 25%
Supreme Court • 25%
District Court • 25%