For years, the Congressional Black Caucus Basis (CBC) has labored to assist and uplift Black communities throughout this nation. Now, an anti-affirmative motion group is accusing the group of discrimination for the CBC’s faculty scholarships, which assist Black college students who face disadvantages from attending underfunded faculties in majority Black districts.
The lawsuit filed by the American Alliance for Equal Rights claims that “awarding instructional alternatives to some younger constituents however not others – primarily based on the colour of their pores and skin – is neither conscientious nor authorized,” within the lawsuit filed on Thursday.
“Racial discrimination is flawed regardless of which group it favors or harms. A scholarship program that tells college students they’re ineligible due to their race, and the race of their representatives, violates one in every of our nation’s oldest civil rights legal guidelines,” mentioned Edward Blum, president of AAER, in a press launch.
AAER’s lawsuit notably raises concern with the muse’s “CBC Spouses Schooling Scholarship,” which has awarded over $11 million to Black recipients since 1988. Awarding over 300 scholarships every year, the muse’s web site says the CBC Spouses applications are designed to “assist present or upcoming faculty college students throughout quite a lot of disciplines,” who “exhibit management capacity by exemplary neighborhood service and tutorial expertise.”
“From the earliest days, CBC Spouses acknowledged a troubling actuality: Black college students had been navigating inequitable training methods whereas federal investments in training had been shrinking,” a CBCF weblog put up, shared in February, learn. “For a lot of recipients, a CBC Spouses scholarship represents not simply monetary help however validation, visibility, and perception.”
Nonetheless, the lawsuit now alleges that CBC’s give attention to Black college students violates the Civil Rights Act of 1866. The American Alliance of Equal Rights’ submitting joins a rising assortment of lawsuits claiming discriminatory practices in opposition to organizations and applications that had been created to fight discrimination in opposition to traditionally marginalized communities. Because the Supreme Courtroom’s landmark ruling putting down affirmative motion, there was a authorized sample. In 2023 AAER filed a lawsuit in opposition to the Fearless Fund a enterprise capital fund supporting Black feminine enterprise homeowners, alleging its Strivers Grant program had been “racially discriminatory” in the direction of non-Black enterprise homeowners. In 2024, a U.S. federal courtroom of appeals dominated in AAER’s favor, suspending the enterprise agency’s program and main the Fearless Fund to shut the grant contest.
Equally, in 2023, AAER filed lawsuits in Texas and Florida federal courts in opposition to worldwide corporations Perkins Coie and Morrison & Foerster, accusing them of illegal racial discrimination in opposition to white candidates. Along with anti-affirmative motion teams like Blum’s, federal organizations beneath the Trump administration have launched discrimination lawsuits and investigations, as a part of the president’s anti-DEI push. Final yr, the Division of Schooling alleged that the PhD Challenge, a nonprofit that helps Black, Latino, and Native American college students earn doctoral levels in enterprise, limits eligibility primarily based on race, accusing the mission’s college companions of partaking in “race-exclusionary practices,” per NPR. Equally, the Division of Justice launched steerage on the appliance of federal antidiscrimination legal guidelines to entities receiving federal funds, “to make sure that recipients of federal funding don’t interact in illegal discrimination.”
Authorized specialists be aware that AAER and Blum’s latest give attention to nonprofit organizations displays an development in his “three-pronged assault on variety, fairness, and inclusion: first in larger training, then on company variety and hiring, and now working to sit back race-based funding and grantmaking exercise.” And we’re already seeing the results of those assaults. Past firms and universities altering the language surrounding their variety, fairness, and inclusion applications, the variety of scholarships with race, ethnicity, or gender standards within the Nationwide Scholarship Suppliers Affiliation database dropped by 25% from March 2023 to June 2025.
Because the racial wealth hole continues to extend, the assault on organizations like CBCF might have actual impacts on Black communities, notably Black youth.




















