
Trump administration probes elite Virginia high school's admissions policies
May 22 (Reuters) - The Trump administration has launched civil rights investigations into whether an admissions policy aimed at diversifying an elite Virginia high school's student body is racially discriminatory.
The U.S. Departments of Justice and Education opened the investigations a year after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a legal challenge alleging that same admissions policy at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology discriminated against Asian American students.
U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon in a statement on Thursday said the policy appears "contrary to the law and to the fundamental principle that students should be evaluated on their merit, not the color of their skin."
Fairfax County Public Schools, the system that oversees the school, in a statement said the matter "has already been fully litigated."
The Alexandria-based state-chartered magnet school, known as TJ, often ranks among the best U.S. public high schools. Before 2020, it took most students from a small number of "feeder" middle schools in more affluent parts of Fairfax County.
The admissions process at the time produced incoming classes with few Black or Hispanic students. Asian Americans comprised 71.5% of its student body in 2019, and white students accounted for another 19.5%.
In 2020, the school board adopted a new admissions policy that eliminated a standardized test from its admissions process, capped the number of students from each of the district's middle schools and guaranteed seats for the top students from each.
After the overhaul, the share of Black and Hispanic students increased, but the percentage of admissions offers made to Asian-American students fell to 54% from 73% the year before. A parents group backed by a conservative legal organization sued, arguing the policy was discriminatory.
The Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case, a surprise to some given its 2023 landmark ruling rejecting race-conscious college admissions policies.
Following a referral from Virginia's Republican attorney general, Harmeet Dhillon, the head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, in a letter, opens new tab said the department would investigate if the school was unlawfully using race in admission decisions.
The U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights said it also is examining whether Fairfax County Public Schools was violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
31 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Guatemalan man deported to Mexico flown back to US after judge's orders
A Guatemalan man who said he was deported to Mexico despite fearing he would be persecuted there was flown back to the US on Wednesday after a judge ordered the Trump administration to facilitate his return, his lawyer said. Brian Murphy, a US district judge in Boston, Massachusetts, had ordered the man's return after the US Department of Justice notified him that its claim that the man had expressly stated he was not afraid of being sent to Mexico was based on erroneous information. In a court order last month, Murphy found that the deportation of the man, identified in legal filings only as OCG, likely 'lacked any semblance of due process'. 'No one has ever suggested that OCG poses any sort of security threat,' Murphy wrote, adding: 'In general, this case presents no special facts or legal circumstances, only the banal horror of a man being wrongfully loaded onto a bus and sent back to a country where he was allegedly just raped and kidnapped.' Murphy went on to say: 'At oral argument, defendants' counsel confirmed that it is 'the policy of the United States not to expel, extradite, or otherwise effect the involuntary return of any person to a country in which there are substantial grounds for believing the person would be in danger of being subjected to torture' … The return of OCG poses a vanishingly small cost to make sure we can still claim to live up to that ideal.' According to a court declaration, OCG, who had returned to Guatemala following his deportation to Mexico two months ago, said: 'I have been living in hiding, in constant panic and constant fear.' OCG, who is gay, had applied for asylum in the US last year after he was attacked multiple times in homophobic acts of violence in Guatemala. 'I don't stay in any of the places I used to stay because the story is the same as ever here: gay people like me are targeted simply for who we are. This produces constant fear and panic,' OCG said in his court declaration from Guatemala, adding: 'Living a normal life is impossible here, and I live in fear because of the past hateful incidences I experienced … There is no justice for me here.' Following Murphy's court order, Donald Trump's administration said in a court filing on 28 May that federal immigration officials were working 'to bring OCG back to the United States on an air charter operations flight return leg'. Last month, Trump officials admitted to an 'error' of falsely claiming that OCG was not afraid of being returned to Mexico. 'Upon further investigation, defendants cannot identify any officer who asked O.C.G. whether he had a fear of return to Mexico. Nor can defendants identify the officer who O.C.G. states 'told [him] that he was being deported to Mexico',' government lawyers said in a court filing. The Guardian has reached out to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for comment. Reuters contributed reporting


Reuters
38 minutes ago
- Reuters
Elon Musk's DOGE exit leaves leadership vacuum at unit
WASHINGTON, June 4 (Reuters) - The Department of Government Efficiency, the brainchild of Elon Musk that upended Washington with its rapid-fire drive to slash thousands of federal jobs and cut costs, is effectively leaderless now that the billionaire and his deputy have stepped down, U.S. lawmakers heard on Wednesday. U.S. President Donald Trump's budget chief, Russ Vought, told a congressional committee that efforts are under way to establish new leadership at DOGE, but its staff currently answer to Trump's cabinet secretaries. "The Cabinet agencies that are in charge of DOGE, the consultants that work for them are fundamentally in control of DOGE," Vought said. "We're in the midst of establishing the leadership on an ongoing basis." Vought's comments will only add to the uncertainty around the future of DOGE and its cost-cutting effort following Musk's announcement last week that he was ceasing work as a special government employee. A key lieutenant, Steve Davis, who was in charge of day-to-day running of DOGE, has also left. The White House has said that DOGE's mission will continue in the absence of Musk, who has since publicly broken with Trump over his sweeping tax cut and spending bill, calling it a "disgusting abomination." The rapidly receding power and influence of DOGE was almost unthinkable as recently as a few weeks ago when it dominated the political landscape in Washington with its aggressive push to fire a swath of government workers. Trump established DOGE to streamline what he says is a bloated and inefficient government. DOGE struggled to cut costs but was more successful in pushing thousands of workers to quit or take early retirement after threatening dismissal without benefits. It is unclear if DOGE and its cadre of young computer technicians will survive in Washington without Musk, especially as some members of Trump's cabinet have soured on DOGE's tactics.


Reuters
43 minutes ago
- Reuters
Fired NTSB vice chair sues Trump over removal from office
WASHINGTON, June 4 (Reuters) - The fired vice chair of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board sued President Donald Trump on Wednesday, saying his removal from office was illegal and threatened the independent agency's safety mission. Alvin Brown, a Democrat who was the first-ever African American elected mayor of Jacksonville, Florida, was designated as vice chair in December by then-President Joe Biden after he joined the five-member board in March 2024. Reuters first reported his May 5 removal from office by the White House. Brown's lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Washington also names the NTSB and NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy, seeking a court order to enable him to perform his duties as a board member and "to ensure that the NTSB can resume its congressionally mandated work as Congress intended." The lawsuit added his removal has "significant and damaging consequences for the work of the Board and its investigation and reporting of major transportation accidents and casualties." The NTSB declined to comment. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The NTSB investigates all civil aviation accidents as well as significant accidents in other modes of transportation - highway, marine, pipeline and railroad - and determines the probable cause and makes safety recommendations. Brown's suit said Trump may remove a board member "only for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office." A lawyer for Brown, Victoria Nugent, said "at a time when transportation safety is top of mind, we should be strengthening, not weakening, the systems meant to protect all Americans." Since January, Trump has fired two Democratic members of the Federal Trade Commission and members of the National Labor Relations Board, Merit Systems Protection Board and Federal Election Commission among others. The U.S. Supreme Court last month allowed Trump's firing of two Democratic members of federal labor boards to remain in effect while their legal challenges proceed, in a dispute that tests his power over independent government agencies. Brown's removal from the NTSB came amid heightened concern about aviation safety following the January 29 mid-air collision of a U.S. Army helicopter and an American Airlines (AAL.O), opens new tab regional jet that killed 67 people. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy wants tens of billions of dollars from Congress to overhaul U.S. air traffic control and staffing.