Stop Funding the Woke and the Stupid
The new Trump administration has a generational opportunity to expunge anti-merit identity politics that have infected and disabled so many American institutions and to bring back merit. So do governors and legislators in the states where Republicans won mandates in this election, too.
For nearly a century following the Pendleton Act of 1883, our federal government used difficult tests to help fill departments; competence was a non-partisan goal. In the 20th century, leaders agreed that we need bright talent to win wars, advance in science, and achieve feats such as the moon landing. By the 1970s, less than 10% of test takers scored high enough on government PACE exams to qualify for senior leadership.
Those tests died in the late 1970s. Because of racial disparities in the results, activist courts ruled that even if tests were predictive of job performance, they were illegal because of the “disparate impact.” Soon, the government was hiring people who would have failed these tests — less qualified people from all backgrounds. President Jimmy Carter’s 1979-80 Democratically-controlled Congress also made it harder to hold government workers accountable. Since then, the bureaucracy has become dumber and dumber.
Over the last decade, the stupidity accelerated: a focus on identity politics meant that merit was actually an anti-priority. As the Biden administration tried to preserve in amber various forms of racial handouts and discrimination, and its failing bureaucracy continued to regularly fritter away billions of dollars, Republicans slowly woke up to the rot.
A fight began in the states to confront some of these policies. Legal fights escalated, and in 2023, the Supreme Court reversed its previous rulings on affirmative action, marking the beginning of the end for the notion that “well-intentioned” racial discrimination is OK in America. It isn’t.
Yale and Princeton, admitting even fewer higher-scoring Asian-Americans this year versus last, may have illegally ignored this ruling; if so, with Trump’s victory, their time is coming.
Unfortunately, this rot still exists even in states that voted for Mr. Trump by 10 (or 30) points. But a few bold leaders have begun paying attention. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis has charged head-on at the “woke” elements of the state government, particularly in the universities.
At the state level, I’ve seen this fight up close as chairman of the Cicero Institute. Our team prepared draft legislation to stop coerced “loyalty oaths” to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) ideology in public universities, and we won: multiple states have adopted versions of those laws. Gutting DEI loyalty oaths is a table-stakes reform for leaders who understand why America works (don’t count on it in blue states, though). But it’s a tiny start. Why not be bolder and fight for merit everywhere it’s under attack?