More than half of Michigan voters favor banning race- and
gender-based preferences in university admissions and government
hiring, according to a poll released Tuesday. Fifty-three percent of
600 likely voters said they favored or were leaning toward a state
constitutional amendment that could be on the November 2006 ballot,
while 33 percent opposed or were leaning against it. Fourteen percent
were undecided. The EPIC/MRA poll was conducted Thursday through
Tuesday and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.
The amendment would stop public agencies and universities from granting
preferential treatment based on race, color, ethnicity, national origin
or sex. Earlier this month, a group seeking to ban race- and
gender-based affirmative action programs said it submitted more than
508,000 signatures to state election officials. At least 317,757 valid
signatures of Michigan voters are needed to put the proposal on the
ballot. [more]
TOO Black for them: Central Michigan University is only 4.5 percent Black. [more]
In 2003, 67 percent of black students at Michigan graduated after six
years, compared with 88 percent of white students, a gap of 21
percentage points. Brigham Young University reported a 25-point gap,
while New York University had the lowest at 1.8 points. [more]
Dennis Archer urges defeat of ballot measure [more]
Affirmative action supporters use King holiday to protest ballot measure [more]