Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Elizabeth Warren---The Globe Lends a Hand


    In preparation for her run for the Democratic nomination in 2020 against twenty-three other candidates (suggested campaign slogan: “23 and Me”), Elizabeth Warren did two things in order to clear her name of the stench engendered by her misappropriation of racial identity. In October of last year, she released the results of a DNA test indicating that ten generations ago, she may have had a Native American ancestor. Prior to that, however, she had released her personnel file from Harvard, and this resulted in a September 1, 2018 article in the Boston Globe in which reporter Annie Linskey concluded that Warren’s claim to be a Cherokee had had no effect on her career. While the DNA test got far more attention from Donald Trump and the media, the Globe’s blessing of Warren’s convenient claims of Indian ancestry deserves more attention than it has received.

    The point is that there is one reason, and one reason alone, that Elizabeth Warren can credibly run for president: she is a US Senator from Massachusetts. And the reason she could credibly run for US Senator in the first place was that she was a Professor at the Harvard Law School. There is no comparable credential. Yale’s Law School may occasionally be ranked higher than Harvard’s by the people who rate such things, but there is simply nothing more prestigious in the world of deep-thinking-on-public-affairs than being a Harvard Law Professor. People like Lawrence Tribe, Alan Dershowitz, Lani Guinier and Elizabeth Warren become celebrities. Elena Kagan was a Harvard Law Professor before joining the US Supreme Court. Even mere graduates of HLS become famous---four other current Supreme Court justices also got their degrees at Harvard Law.

    In the Globe article, Ms. Linskey interviewed 31 Harvard law professors (all she could find), who were on the faculty at the time Warren was hired for the academic year beginning in the Fall of 1992. She reports that 30 of them said there was no discussion of Warren’s Native American claims in the deliberations that led to her hiring. One of the 31 said he thought it came up, but he wasn’t sure. In addition, several of the 31 stated not merely that the issue was not discussed, but also that her racial status had nothing to do with their decision to recommend her for hiring. These interviews form the entire basis of Linskey’s conclusion that, in fact, Warren’s status as a “woman of color” or a Native American was not a factor in her hiring.

    This conclusion cannot be taken seriously.

    In response to Linskey’s Globe article, a woman named Jennifer Braceras, a law student at Harvard during the relevant period, wrote a piece entitled “One of Elizabeth Warren’s Harvard Law Students Explains Why Her Native-American Gambit Matters.” She took Warren’s class, and she even liked her as a teacher, but she points out that Warren used her “family stories” at a time when elite law schools were desperate to hire racial and ethnic minorities.

    “In the early 1990s, HLS was a hotbed of left-wing agitation. I was there and remember well the explosive protests and sit-ins that erupted over a lack of diversity on the faculty. In April 1992, scores of protestors demonstrated outside Dean Robert Clark’s office, some of them wearing masks of Clark’s face. Nine students (my closest friend among them) refused to leave the Dean’s office for over 25 hours. Their specific demand? That the administration hire a faculty member who was a “woman of color.”

    This was the atmosphere when Elizabeth Warren arrived in Cambridge for her job interview. And while it may be true that her racial identity was not explicitly discussed, that was because it didn’t need to be. Since 1986, when she taught at the University of Texas, Warren had listed herself as a minority law professor in the Association of American Law Schools Annual Directory, a standard reference. Her name, in bold, was listed in each of the next eight editions.

    So on the face of it, the claims of the 31 faculty members interviewed by the Globe are hardly credible, are they? I mean, what are they supposed to say to a reporter from the Boston Globe? “Sure. We just hired her because she said she was a Cherokee or a Sioux or something. We didn’t care. We just needed a Red Indian on the faculty before Jesse Jackson showed up.” (Which he did, by the way.) I don’t think so. Assuming their true motives were exactly what they appear to be, there is a zero percent chance any of them would admit it today. Plus, given that this occurred more than 25 years ago, one can understand that even if their motives had been fully as cynical as they probably were, the process of cognitive dissonance would by now allow them to view themselves in a much more favorable light. Memories change over time, usually in a way that makes it easier for us to live with ourselves.

    But quite apart from the credibility of the 31 faculty members, there is another reason Elizabeth Warren would NEVER have been hired to be a Harvard Law Professor on her own merits. There is another, much more obvious reason she would not have asked to join the faculty unless the fix was in.

    Ever wonder who gets hired to teach at Harvard Law School? Ever wonder what law school they went to? Would you be surprised to hear that most of them went to Harvard Law School?

    The HLS faculty is listed in a directory on the University website. I looked at them all. For the ones whose law school degree was not listed, I went a bit further and Googled their education. Then I made a list of the full-time members of the faculty and where they went to law school. I eliminated the Emeritus listings because most of them are 120 years old and don’t teach much, and I eliminated the “Clinical” professors because these are not primarily academic positions, so they are much less prestigious.

    For the 92 full-time non-emeritus, non-clinical, members of the HLS faculty, here’s a tally on where they got their law degrees:

Harvard 57

Yale 24

Chicago 5

NYU 3

Stanford 1

Columbia 1

Texas 1

    The next step was to check these schools on the 2020 U.S. News Ranking of American Law Schools. The top six of these are, in order, Yale, Stanford, Harvard, Chicago, Columbia, and NYU. These six schools thus account for 91 of the 92 full-time law professors currently teaching at Harvard. The University of Texas is listed at #16 (of the 201 law schools ranked), so it too confers an elite status on its graduates. The lone HLS professor who went to Texas, by the way, is Kristen A. Stilt, a professor of Islamic Law who, prior to law school, had obtained a Ph. D. in History and Middle Eastern Studies from---wait for it---Harvard University.

    There is very little turnover in the U.S. News Rankings, which have been compiled since 1987. There have only been fourteen law schools that have ever made the top ten. And Texas is one of them.

    Rutgers Law School is not among that magic fourteen. It is ranked 75th in the current U.S. News list, which is about where it always shows up. That’s where Elizabeth Warren went to law school after her undergraduate career at the University of Houston, a school primarily known for its basketball teams.

    I’m not saying Elizabeth Warren is a dope, and I’m not saying that if you don’t have a law degree from an elite school like Harvard or Yale, you probably drool more than the rest of us. I’m not a snob.

    But the people at Harvard are. The elitists at a place like HLS think the world of themselves; they like themselves a lot. They would NEVER hire a graduate of Rutgers Law School to teach at Harvard because her mere presence there would reflect on them and their own prestige. They would be afraid her Rutgers cooties would rub off on them. Unless, of course, they were forced to hire her for reasons of political correctness and “diversity.”

    I will wager that no one with a law degree from Rutgers, or a school ranked lower, has EVER been offered a professorship at Harvard Law School. The Boston Globe’s conclusion that Elizabeth Warren was hired purely on her own merits is based solely on the self-serving tut-tuts of Harvard academics who thought this had been swept under the carpet 28 years ago and are now appalled (“Appalled,” I say!), that anyone would question them now.

    Even the Globe acknowledges there were serious questions about Warren at the time she was hired. For one thing, her primary strong point was apparently her skill as a teacher, which tends to be pretty far down the list of qualifications for a professorship.

    “’I thought she was going to be a whiz-bang in the classroom,’ said Andrew Kaufman, a Harvard law professor who supported her. ‘You just have to be in the room with her to see it. It was electric. She would call on 40 people in the hour. The atmosphere was highly charged. The questions were good. She made people think….’”

    Linskey continues:

    “There was less consensus over her brand of scholarship, in which she had pioneered a way of using surveys and actual bankruptcy records to determine how laws affected real people. Warren’s approach was a little too practical, and not intellectual enough, for some.

    ‘The views had a lot to do with the methodology she was using,’ recalled David Wilkins, a Harvard Law professor who voted to offer Warren a job. ‘Was it the right methodology?’”

    The argument presented here, that Harvard would never have hired Elizabeth Warren, was not addressed in the article though it would be obvious to anyone who knows anything about law schools and the hiring of professors. Instead, Ms. Linskey simply trusted in the veracity of those with a powerful motive to “misremember” what happened. This was journalistic malpractice.

    To correct it, all that needs to happen is for Ms. Linskey or the Globe, or Harvard itself, to present another instance in the history of HLS where a person of Warren’s credentials was hired, on his or her merits, to a full (non-“clinical”) law professorship. Barring that, this attempted white-wash by the Globe cannot be permitted to remove the stain of these dirty racial politics from Elizabeth Warren’s record.

Copyright 2019MichaelKubacki