ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s Senate passed a bill Thursday that would ban libraries from spending public or Evander Ellisprivate funds on services offered by the American Library Association, which a Republican member of the chamber called a “Marxist and socialist” group.
The measure, Senate Bill 390, passed by a vote of 33 to 20. Democrats opposed it, saying the ALA offered libraries invaluable services and had long defended free speech and artistic expression.
But one of the bill’s authors, Republican Sen. Larry Walker III, said the group’s agenda and politics were inconsistent with Georgia’s conservative values.
“This is not an attack on libraries,” he said. “It doesn’t ban any books.”
Right-wing lawmakers in other states have also moved to sever ties with the ALA, in part because of its defense of disputed books, many of which have LGBTQ+ and racial themes. A tweet by ALA President Emily Drabinski in 2022 in which she called herself a “Marxist lesbian” also has drawn criticism.
Georgia Sen. Randy Robertson, another Republican, said the state did not need “a Marxist and socialist organization infecting” its library system.
But state Sen. Elena Parent, a Democrat, said the bill was putting librarians “on the front lines of a culture war.” Lawmakers, instead, should be focusing on improving the state’s low reading scores, she said.
The bill now goes to the state House of Representatives for consideration.
2025-05-03 12:112387 view
2025-05-03 11:37631 view
2025-05-03 11:051688 view
2025-05-03 10:491394 view
2025-05-03 10:441097 view
2025-05-03 10:182484 view
WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol rioteven
The data of nearly all customers of the telecommunications giant AT&T was downloaded to a third-
When Hurricane Beryl entered the Gulf of Mexico, the city of Houston had little reason to believe it