Trump demands proof of race-neutral college admissions
President Donald Trump has thrown down the gauntlet, demanding colleges nationwide submit hard data to prove race plays no role in their admissions decisions.
According to the New York Post, Trump signed a memorandum on Thursday directing Education Secretary Linda McMahon to enforce this transparency under threat of penalties tied to federal financial aid. The policy echoes recent settlements with elite institutions like Brown and Columbia, where the government secured access to detailed admissions statistics.
This move comes amid lingering suspicions that colleges are sidestepping a 2023 Supreme Court ruling banning affirmative action. Many conservatives argue that personal essays and diversity statements serve as backdoor methods to factor in race, undermining the spirit of the law.
Challenging Hidden Bias in Admissions
Trump’s memorandum bluntly states, “The persistent lack of available data, paired with the rampant use of ‘diversity statements’ and other overt and hidden racial proxies, continues to raise concerns about whether race is actually used in admissions decisions in practice.” While the intent seems clear, let’s be honest: if schools are dodging the rules, will a stack of spreadsheets really expose the truth, or just bury it under bureaucratic noise?
The directive mandates the National Center for Education Statistics to gather specifics on race, sex, and academic metrics for applicants, admitted, and enrolled students. Failure to comply could trigger consequences under Title IV of the Higher Education Act, a lever that ties federal aid to accountability.
Yet, skeptics like Jon Fansmith from the American Council on Education question the teeth of this order, noting, “Ultimately, will it mean anything? Probably not.” His dismissal suggests a deeper issue: if colleges can’t legally collect race data during applications, as he claims, what’s the point of demanding numbers that might not even exist?
Diversity Shifts After Supreme Court Ruling
Post-2023, after the Supreme Court struck down affirmative action, diversity on campuses showed no uniform trend. Some elite schools like MIT and Amherst saw sharp declines in Black student enrollment, while others, including Yale and Princeton, barely budged.
The court’s ruling, penned by Chief Justice John Roberts, allowed consideration of race only if tied to an applicant’s unique character or abilities through personal narratives. This loophole has led some colleges to lean heavily on essays to glean background details, a tactic that feels more like a workaround than a solution.
Alternatives to affirmative action aren’t new; for years, schools have prioritized low-income students or guaranteed spots to top performers from diverse regions. But when California banned race-based admissions in 1996, Black and Hispanic enrollment at Berkeley and UCLA plummeted by half within two years, showing how hard it is to engineer balance without direct tools.
State Experiments and Mixed Results
States like California and Michigan, which banned affirmative action long before the Supreme Court ruling, offer a glimpse into the challenges. At UCLA and Berkeley, Hispanic students now represent 20% of undergraduates, up from 1996 but still far below their 53% share of state high school graduates, while Black students hover at a mere 4%.
California’s attempt to admit the top 9% of each high school aimed to capture talent from varied backgrounds, but it barely moved the needle at top campuses flooded with applicants. Texas saw better success with a similar model, though critics argue it’s not a one-size-fits-all fix.
Michigan, after its 2006 ban, pivoted to low-income outreach, sending counselors to underserved schools and offering full scholarships. Despite these efforts, Black enrollment slid from 8% in 2006 to 4% now, a stark reminder that good intentions don’t always yield results.
A Push for Fairness or Political Theater?
Trump’s order may resonate with those frustrated by perceived unfairness in elite admissions, where the game often seems rigged against merit alone. But without clear enforcement or a way to pierce the veil of subjective essays, this policy risks being more symbolic than transformative.
Fansmith’s point about incomplete data due to students opting out of race questions post-enrollment adds another layer of doubt. If the numbers are patchy, as he suggests, how can anyone claim victory or failure in this push for transparency?
Ultimately, the battle over race in admissions reflects a deeper cultural rift about fairness and opportunity. While the administration’s rhetoric targets a progressive agenda in academia, the real question remains: can data alone dismantle systemic habits, or are we just shuffling papers while the same old biases quietly persist?




