WABE
This year, Senate Bill 390 was an exception to that rule — Republican leadership tabled the legislation in the morning, bringing it short of a final vote.
The bill would have outlawed the American Library Association from Georgia’s public and school libraries, making it illegal for them to accept ALA funding.
Republican state Sen. Larry Walker was the bill’s sponsor. He came up with the legislation after his local library — a branch in Houston County — applied for an ALA grant to diversify its curriculum.
“The American Library Association are trying to poison the minds of our children with their radical agenda and their Marxist leader,” he said at a committee meeting earlier this week.
ALA President Emily Drabinski referred to herself as a “Marxist lesbian” in a since-deleted tweet.
“This bill would propose defunding the American Library Association and untangle our public libraries from being held hostage by them,” Walker continued.
But in the end, Republican leadership could not get behind the bill.
“We were afraid that there were some unintended consequences that would affect some of our college libraries affiliating with people that nobody had a problem with,” said Republican state Rep. Chuck Martin, chair of the House Higher Education committee.
Martin is largely referring to hang-ups that lawmakers had with library and librarian accreditation.
As a national nonprofit, the ALA is the primary body that accredits librarians and the schools that train them. By making it illegial for libraries in Georgia to accept ALA funding, library and librarian accreditation would also come into question.
Though SB 390 has died this session, Martin maintains that Walker’s point has been made.
“[Sen. Larry Walker] has made a positive impact, even without the bill’s final passage,” he said. “I believe that the ALA has heard loud and clear that they need to be careful about allowing an individual — regardless of their political or social beliefs … to permeate so deeply in an organization that it has this kind of an impact.”
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