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Slavery-related admissions bill dies
Los Angeles Times
|October 15, 2025
Governor rejects AB 7, which would have allowed colleges to offer priority to descendants of slaves and could have faced legal challenges
ASSEMBLYMEMBER Isaac Bryan, who introduced the bill, said its goal was to rectify a “legacy of exclusion.”
(JASON ARMOND Los Angeles Times)
Gavin Newsom on Monday vetoed legislation that would have allowed public and private colleges to provide preferential admissions to applicants directly descended from individuals who were enslaved in the United States before 1900.
The governor thanked the bill's author for his commitment to addressing disparities and urged educational institutions to review and determine “how, when, and if this type of preference can be adopted.”
“This bill clarifies, to the extent permitted by federal law, that California public and private postsecondary educational institutions may consider providing a preference in admissions to an applicant who is a descendant of slavery,” Newsom wrote Monday in his veto. “These institutions already have the authority to determine whether to provide admissions preferences like this one, and accordingly, this bill is unnecessary.”
The legislation would not have required applicants to belong to any particular race or ethnicity — a crucial detail that proponents said distinguished it from affirmative action, which is banned at California colleges. Critics, however, argued the term “slave” was used as a proxy for race.
Legal experts told The Times last month the measure probably would have faced challenges in court if the governor signed it into law.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 15, 2025-Ausgabe von Los Angeles Times.
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