In 1988 Cook County adopted an ordinance, here challenged as a denial of equal protection of the laws, establishing a “Minority- and Women-Owned Business Enterprise Program” (the “M/WBE” program, the parties call it), which requires that a minimum of 30 percent of the total value of any construction contract made by the County be awarded to enterprises at least 51 percent owned by members of specified minority groups such as blacks and Hispanics, and a minimum of 10 percent of the value of the contract to enterprises at least 51 percent owned by women. These quotas can be, and usually are, satisfied by the hiring of minority- or woman-owned subcontractors by prime contractors that are not themselves minority- or woman-owned. After a bench trial, the district court ruled that the program was unconstitutional,
A law that grants preferential treatment on the basis of race or ethnicity
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does not deny the equal protection of the laws if it is (1) a remedy for (2) intentional discrimination committed by (3) the public entity that is according the preferential treatment (unless, as is not argued here, the entity has been given responsibility by the state for enforcing state or local laws against private discrimination,
City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.,
Another unresolved issue is whether a different, and specifically a more permissive, standard is applicable to preferential treatment on the basis of sex rather than race or ethnicity. See
Milwaukee County Pavers Ass’n v. Fiedler,
There is, to begin with, no credible evidence that Cook County in the award of construction contracts ever intentionally (or for that matter unintentionally) discriminated against any of the groups favored by the program. See
Associated General Contractors of Ohio, Inc. v. Drabik, supra,
As the district court noted, moreover, the County “conceded that [it] had no specific evidence of pre-enactment discrimination to support the ordinance.”
Nor is there any basis for attributing to the County any discrimination that prime contractors may have engaged in. The County reminds us of the suggestion in
Croson
that a state or local government might be permitted to adopt a discriminatory remedy if it had been a “passive participant” in the private discrimination against which the remedy is directed.
City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., supra,
And if the County had been complicit in discrimination by prime contractors, still it would be odd to try to remedy that discrimination by requiring discrimination in favor of minority stockholders, as distinct from employees. That is a standard feature of minority set-aside programs, but a puzzling one in terms of the stated objectives of such programs. There may have been a time when prime contractors in parts of Cook County were unlikely to award subcontracts to firms whose workforce was black, Hispanic, or female, but if so it is doubtful that these prime contractors would have known what the ownership structure of the subcontractors was. If there was prejudice against minority workers, minority-owned firms could beat it by salting their workforces with the number of white males demanded by bigoted prime contractors.
Even if the record made a case for remedial action of the general sort found in the ordinance, it would flunk the constitutional test by not being carefully designed to achieve the ostensible remedial aim and no more. A state or local government that has discriminated just against blacks may not by way of remedy discriminate in favor of blacks and Asian-Americans and women.
City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., supra,
The County’s briefs in this court do not mention the “narrow tailoring” issue, even though the requirement of narrow tailoring is an independent one that must be satisfied for a minority set-aside program to withstand constitutional challenge and even though the district court found that it had not been satisfied. The plaintiff pointed this out in its brief and argued that we could affirm on the basis of the County’s forfeiture.
Arsberry v. Illinois,
The County’s laundry list of favored minorities includes two groups — persons whose ancestors came to the United States from Spain or Portugal — that common sense (not contradicted by any evidence) instructs have never been subject to significant discrimination by Cook County. Even if “Hispanic,” the root of which is the Spanish word for Spain, can be stretched to include people of Portuguese origin (most Brazilians, for example), the concern with discrimination on the basis of Hispanic ethnicity is limited to discrimination against people of South or Central American origin, who often are racially distinct from persons of direct European origin because their ancestors include blacks or Indians or both; of course they may instead or as well be ethnically distinct on the basis of culture or language. The concern with racial discrimination does not extend to Spanish or Portuguese people, or the concern with ethnic discrimination to persons of Spanish or Portuguese ancestry born in the United States; but even as to those born abroad, there is nothing to differentiate immigrants from Spain or Portugal from immigrants from Italy, Greece, or other southern European countries so far as a history of discrimination in the United States is concerned. See
Peightal v. Metropolitan Dade County,
So the ordinance is overinclusive. Nor has the County made any effort to show that, were it not for a history of discrimination, minorities would have 30 percent, and women 10 percent, of County construction contracts. If a state or local government had in consequence of its former discrimination limited the percentage of minority contractors on public projects to 10 percent, and in the absence of discrimination the percentage would have been 20 percent, the government could not, by way of remedy, establish a minority quota of 50 percent. At least it could not do that indefinitely, so that long after the minorities had caught up, their percentage of contracts would continue to swell, until they ended up with two and a half times (50 percent divided by 20 percent) more contracts than they would have had if the government had never discriminated against them. Chicago Firefighters Local 2 v. City of Chicago, supra, 249 F.3d at 655.
We recur in this hypothetical to one of the most dubious propositions advanced by *648 the County in this case — that a comparison of the fraction of minority subcontractors on public and private projects established discrimination against minorities by prime contractors on the latter type of project. The larger the quota imposed on prime contractors on hiring subcontractors for public projects, the smaller will be the percentage of subcontractors hired for private projects even if there is no discrimination by prime contractors, simply because the quota will have drawn minority subcontractors into the public projects and driven majority subcontractors out of those projects and into the private ones.
AFFIRMED.
