Copy
Issue 39 • NOVEMBER 7, 2022

PRESENTED BY THE KAUFFMAN FOUNDATION

👋 Good morning, and welcome to The Yappie’s AAPI politics briefing — your guide to the policy news and activism affecting Asian Americans + Pacific Islanders. Send tips and feedback to editors@theyappie.com and support our work by making a donation. 

Edited by Shawna Chen and Mary Yang

story number 1

THE BIG STORY

The nine justices of the U.S. Supreme Court. Photo courtesy of Fred Schilling, Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States.
  

Where affirmative action stands in Asian America

The Supreme Court is poised to overturn decades of precedent that allow colleges to consider race in admissions. The majority conservative court appeared skeptical of the case for affirmative action during oral arguments last Monday.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
🏛️ The lawsuits in question: Led by conservative strategist Ed Blum, a group called Students for Fair Admissions sued Harvard University and the University of North Carolina alleging that the universities unfairly consider race in the admissions process—to the benefit of Black, Latino, and Native American applicants and the detriment of Asian or white applicants.
  • Counterpoint: A 2022 study of the University of California, which is barred from considering race in admissions under state law, found that Filipino, Thai, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, and Laotian students were admitted at below-average rates across the system’s nine campuses even though AAPIs in general were overrepresented. Many AAPI groups, such as Samoans and Chamorros, were underrepresented in the student populations, the study found.
  • Education rates also vary greatly within the AAPI community. Almost three in four Indian Americans and over half of Japanese and Korean Americans aged 24 or older had at least a bachelor’s degree in 2019, while fewer than one in five of their Laotian, Hmong, and Cambodian counterparts had the same, USA Today’s Alia Wong writes.

Toplines from the bench: Justice Elena Kagan, who was nominated by former President Barack Obama (D) in 2010, said she was worried about a “decline in minority admissions” if the court were to rule against affirmative action in higher education. She described elite universities as “pipelines to leadership in our society.” 

  • The conservative justices appeared unmoved, however, questioning how long affirmative action would be allowed to continue in the bid for educational diversity—and whether it’s even necessary in the first place. 
  • They also highlighted the alleged harm to Asian American applicants in the Harvard case, where SFFA is arguing that the college discriminates against Asian American students by using subjective standards to determine ratings on personal character.

🚨 For over four decades, the Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of affirmative action programs for universities to consider the race of applicants, as long as it is only one of many factors in admissions decisions. 

  • That could change next summer, when justices will likely finalize their opinions.
DATA POINT
‍🎓 The numbers: About 69% of Asian American registered voters favor “affirmative action policies designed to help Black people, women, and other minorities gain better access to higher education,” according to an August survey by AAPI Data. 
  • But in a Washington Post-Schar School poll conducted in October, 65% of Asian Americans said they’d support a Supreme Court decision that banned colleges and universities from “considering a student’s race and ethnicity when making decisions about student admissions.” 
  • Many have also pointed out that affirmative action and Harvard’s discriminatory use of ratings are two separate issues that shouldn’t be conflated.
🗣️ VOICES
In their words: “I don’t want to completely ban something and not have a solution,” Bhavik Patel, a 33-year-old Indian American student pursuing an advanced degree in pharmacy, told the Post. “It has to be a better solution than what the current process is.” 
  • “Too many AAPIs are locked out of education because of economic barriers—affirmative action helps AAPI students to achieve their goals,” Alvina Yeh, executive director of the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, said in a statement after an AAPI rally in defense of affirmative action last week. 
  • “Not only is the argument against affirmative action misleading—it also attempts to divide communities of color and harms millions of young AAPIs in the process.”

✍️ AAPIs’ role in building affirmative action: After a decades-long battle led by the Japanese American Citizens League and other AAPI groups fighting discriminatory employment practices post-World War II, fair employment practice laws were implemented across the U.S. and later led to affirmative action policies in recognition of the need for greater representation of minority groups, Ellen Wu writes for Slate.

  • But over time, Asian Americans became increasingly perceived as “overrepresented,” which undercut their claims as a minority in wider U.S. society

Worth noting: In California, which banned affirmative action policies in 1996, top universities have shown clear disparities in attendance among AAPI ethnic groups. At UCLA, Hmong and Bangladeshi student applicants were admitted at rates 13% and 10% less than the overall average rate for all AAPIs, while Taiwanese applicants were admitted at a rate 8% higher, per 2010 UCLA admissions data.

Author HeadshotAuthor Headshot  — By Wendy Ying Lau + Katrina Pham
A MESSAGE FROM THE KAUFFMAN FOUNDATION
Since 1996, the Kauffman Foundation has tracked entrepreneurial data to understand how it has evolved over time.

Important highlights from 2021 data include a notable shift toward older new entrepreneurs and the rise in the share of new Asian entrepreneurs – from 3.4% in 1996 to 7.3% in 2021.

See More Entrepreneurship Data by Demographic

LEARN MORE
story number 1

AAPI NATION

🔎 CITY SPOTLIGHT
Our round-up of headlines from metro areas across the U.S.

SEATTLE — Seattle’s new budget would reduce the city’s fund to combat anti-Asian hate from $400,000 in 2022 to $167,000 in 2023, Brahmjot Kaur of NBC News writes. The proposed cut has faced backlash from community leaders who say further investment is needed for mental health services and trauma-related care.

LOS ANGELES — Progressive House candidate David Kim (D), an immigration and child dependency attorney, is seeking to unseat incumbent Jimmy Gomez (D) in Los Angeles’ 34th congressional district, which spans Koreatown and downtown L.A. Kim, a second-generation Korean American, lost to Gomez in 2020 by a margin of 53% to 47%, Jeong Park of the Los Angeles Times reports.

  • Kim, who was endorsed by the L.A. chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, is viewed as the more outspoken among the two candidates, both progressives. “We need a moral revolution in Los Angeles,” Kim shouted out toward a crowd of protesters in front of City Hall following the audio leak of racist remarks by L.A. city council members.

ST. PAUL — A Hmong American woman will become the next Ramsey County commissioner representing the East Side of St. Paul, Sahan Journal’s Becky Z. Dernbach reports. Either Mai Chong Xiong, 33, or Ying Vang-Pao, 56, will become the first-ever Hmong county commissioner elected in the state of Minnesota. The winner of the election will help oversee the county’s budget, manage long-term projects, and represent the county’s interests at the federal and state level.

📈 NUMBER OF THE WEEK

2027

That’s when the U.S. Navy will finish permanently closing its World War II-era fuel storage tanks and pipelines at Red Hill, Honolulu Civil Beat’s Christina Jedra reports. Native Hawaiians have protested the Navy’s delay in shutting down Red Hill since a fuel leak led to a widespread water contamination crisis. 

A Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command contractor prepares to install monitors to detect petroleum contamination in the Red Hill Well. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Navy.
CATCH UP
👉 Here's what else is happening across America...

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently released its plan to release the sihek—a bird native to Guam—not on Guam, but on Palmyra Atoll instead, to the dismay of many Chamorros, Julian Aguon writes in a personal column for The Guardian. The population of the sihek, otherwise known as the Guam kingfisher, rapidly declined with the introduction of the invasive brown tree snake, which was inadvertently carried onto the island by military ships after World War II.

The man convicted of killing Harris County Sheriff's Deputy Sandeep Dhaliwal, the first Sikh deputy on the force, was sentenced to the death penalty by a Harris County jury, Houston Public Media’s Adam Zuvanich reports. Dhaliwal, who drew national attention in 2015 when he successfully sought permission to wear his turban while on duty as part of his faith, was fatally shot during a traffic stop in 2019. “We are extremely grateful that justice has been served,” Sheriff Ed Gonzalez wrote on Twitter.

Making moves: Sonal Shah, founding president of The Asian American Foundation, will take the helm of The Texas Tribune as the nonprofit newsroom’s new CEO alongside editor-in-chief Sewell Chan.

On our watchlist: Celebrate the legacy of one of the most iconic Asian American pop culture publications with PBS’ new documentary on the Giant Robot magazine, which thrived for decades in an era with few platforms for Asian Americans. 
Author HeadshotAuthor Headshot  — By Preston Lieu + Rachel Lee
A MESSAGE FROM THE KAUFFMAN FOUNDATION
The Kauffman Foundation helps unlock opportunity for all so that people can achieve financial stability, upward mobility, and economic prosperity – regardless of race, gender, or geography.

Stay Connected with the Kauffman Foundation

LEARN MORE
Informing and Empowering AAPI Communities
Made with ♥ by Andrew Huang, Andrew Peng, Shawna Chen, Dan Hu, Meher Bhatia, John Camara, Candy Chan, Maya Chu, Rachel Lee, Preston Lieu, Katelyn Monaco, Katrina Pham, Sonia Prasad, Javan Santos, Natalie Wu, Cindy Xie, Joshua Yang, Mary Yang, Wendy Ying Lau, and Samson Zhang.

Fiscally sponsored by the Asian American Journalists Association.
Inspired by the Asian Creative Network and Wong Fu Productions.

Copyright © 2022. All rights reserved.
Twitter
Instagram
Facebook
The Yappie






This email was sent to <<Email Address>>
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
The Yappie · 1209 Orange Street · Wilmington, DE 19801 · USA