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Conservative Group Says Los Angeles School Policy Hurts White Students in Federal Lawsuit

January 29, 2026

A conservative organization called the 1776 Project Foundation has filed a federal lawsuit against the Los Angeles Unified School District, challenging a decades-old policy designed to counter segregation's harmful effects. The policy, stemming from court orders in the 1970s, provides advantages such as smaller class sizes and priority magnet school admission to schools where students are predominantly Hispanic, Black, Asian, or other non-white populations. The group argues this constitutes illegal racial discrimination against white students, violating both the Civil Rights Act and the Constitution's equal protection guarantee.

Who is affected

  • Students attending schools classified as predominantly Hispanic, Black, Asian, or other non-white (over 600 schools in the district)
  • Students attending schools not classified under this designation (fewer than 100 schools)
  • White students and their families, including a parent whose children were allegedly denied magnet program admission
  • Los Angeles Unified School District
  • Civil rights groups advocating for desegregation orders

What action is being taken

  • The 1776 Project Foundation is filing/has filed a federal lawsuit challenging the Los Angeles school district policy
  • Trump administration officials are pushing for the lifting of Civil Rights Movement-era school desegregation court orders

Why it matters

  • This lawsuit represents a significant legal challenge to affirmative desegregation policies that have been in place for over 50 years. The outcome could determine whether school districts can continue using race-conscious policies to address historical and ongoing segregation, potentially affecting educational equity efforts nationwide. The case touches on fundamental tensions between civil rights protections and equal protection claims, with implications for how schools address educational disparities rooted in America's segregation legacy.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint