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A Senate Committee Takes Up School Book Wars, Complete With Sharp Partisan Divisions

By Mark Walsh 鈥 September 12, 2023 4 min read
Alexi Giannoulias, Illinois secretary of state, talks with Chairman Richard Durbin, D-Ill., right, and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, during the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing titled "Book Bans: Examining How Censorship Limits Liberty and Literature," in Hart Building on Tuesday, September 12, 2023.
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The national debate over book challenges in schools and libraries reached the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, with moments of rancor similar to those found at school board meetings across the country.

鈥淚 understand and respect that parents may choose to limit what their children read, especially at a younger age,鈥 said Sen. Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., the chairman of the committee. 鈥淏ut no parent should have the right to tell another parent鈥檚 child what they can and cannot read in school or at home. Every student deserves access to books that reflect their experiences and help them better understand who they are.鈥

Durbin called the hearing to highlight a that would withhold state grants from libraries unless they adopt a policy protecting books and other resources from being 鈥減roscribed, removed, or restricted鈥 based on 鈥減artisan or doctrinal disapproval.鈥

鈥淭his 鈥楻ight to Read鈥 legislation will help remove the pressure that librarians have tragically had to endure over the last couple years,鈥 Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, a Democrat who is also the state librarian, said before the committee.

Republicans on the panel, and their witnesses, questioned the attention being paid to the issue and whether books were actually being 鈥渂anned.鈥

鈥淎bout this hearing鈥攚hat is our role here?鈥 said Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, the ranking Republican. 鈥淲hat am I supposed to do? Am I suppose to take over every school board in the country and veto their decisions?鈥

Graham added, 鈥淭o all the people out there who think there are things being pushed in the schools that go over the line, you鈥檙e absolutely right.鈥

What is a book ban?

Max Eden, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a Republican witness, said 鈥渂ooks aren鈥檛 being banned鈥 because even controversial titles such as the LGBTQ memoir by Maia Kobabe, remain available for sale and on many library book shelves.

Eden said the media has wrongly accepted the expansive definition of 鈥渂an鈥 offered by PEN America, the First Amendment advocacy group, in its 2022 report 鈥溾

鈥淚f a book has been taken off the shelves, reviewed, and then put back on the shelves it has, according to PEN, been 鈥榖anned,鈥欌 said Eden, who countering the PEN study. 鈥淚f a school adds a parental permission requirement to a book, it has, according to PEN, been 鈥榖anned.鈥 If a book is moved to the guidance counselor鈥檚 office, it has, according to PEN, been 鈥榖anned.鈥欌

Emily J.M. Knox, an associate professor of information sciences at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign and a Democratic witness, acknowledged that the term 鈥渂ook banning鈥 was imprecise.

鈥淚 believe the term 鈥榖ook challenges鈥 more precisely describes the various actions that are taking place around the country,鈥 Knox said. 鈥淎 challenge occurs when an individual or group asks to redact, remove, restrict, or relocate materials within libraries and schools.鈥

She said 鈥渕aterials in public institutions have always been challenged, but we have never seen anything like the current number of cases.鈥

Challenges to books addressing race or LGBTQ+ issues 鈥渇latten the people鈥檚 humanity,鈥 Knox said. 鈥淧eople are always more than their sexual or gender identity.鈥

Nicole Neily, the president of Parents Defending Education and a GOP witness, said that many books are simply not age appropriate for children who have access to them.

鈥淪chool boards across the country cut the mics on parents who read passages from these books, stating, 鈥楾his is inappropriate, there are children in the room,鈥欌 Neily said. 鈥淵et those same books are being provided to children in schools.鈥

Sexually explicit or honest reckoning with humanity?

Along that line, Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., read sexually explicit passages about oral and anal sex from Gender Queer and , an LGBTQ+ 鈥渕emoir-manifesto鈥 by George M. Johnson. Kennedy then asked Giannoulias whether he believed only librarians should be allowed to decide whether young people could read such passages.

鈥淲ith all due respect, senator, the words you spoke are disturbing, especially coming out of your mouth,鈥 said Giannoulias during a testy verbal exchange with Kennedy. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not advocating for kids to read porn. 鈥 We鈥檙e advocating for random parents not to have the ability, under the guise of keeping kids safe, to challenge the world view of every single manner on these issues.鈥

Cameron Samuels, a student who formed a group to battle book challenges at their high school in Katy, Texas, (and a Democratic witness), told Kennedy that what the senator views as 鈥渟exual鈥 material 鈥渋s synonymous with LGBTQ identity.鈥

鈥淧arents should be working with students and educators to make decisions鈥 on the availability of some of these books, said Samuels, a 2022 high school graduate who now attends Brandeis University. They verbally tussled with Kennedy over the LGBTQ book passages.

All Boys Aren鈥檛 Blue is about sexual abuse. It鈥檚 not erotic,鈥 Samuels said. 鈥淪tudents who do not read books like All Boys Aren鈥檛 Blue cannot learn what is appropriate. They cannot learn about abuse.鈥

Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., said, 鈥淭here is no one on this committee who believes that children should have access to materials that are inappropriate for their age. 鈥 This to me is about something deeper that is going on in the American culture right now, and that鈥檚 really troubling.鈥

鈥淚 actually think there is a problem when we are attacking our own history, and trying to Disney-ify it, as opposed to celebrating what was a rough, difficult, uncomfortable, messy American history,鈥 Booker said. 鈥淭here is some negativity when young people are learning history that is bereft of the complications and difficulties of race issues, of gender issues, of LGBTQ issues.鈥

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