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New Bill Seeks to Ban LGBTQ+ Books From Public Schools Nationwide

New Bill Seeks to Ban LGBTQ+ Books From Public Schools Nationwide

Shyla WatsonThu, February 26, 2026 at 8:43 PM UTC

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Kids reading stock imageCredit: Getty -

A new bill proposes banning federal funds for LGBTQ+ books and materials in schools nationwide.

The "Stop the Sexualization of Children Act" defines "sexually oriented material" to include content about "gender dysphoria or transgenderism"

The bill also limits "classic works" in art and literature to specific pre-approved lists

LGBTQ+ books could be banned from public schools nationwide if a new bill passes.

On Tuesday, Feb. 24, House Representative Mary Miller (Ill.) introduced House Resolution 7661 (H.R. 7661), which would amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 and would ban the use of any federal funds "to develop, implement, facilitate, host or promote any program or activity for, or to provide or promote literature or other materials to, children under the age of 18 that includes sexually oriented material, and for other purposes."

The bill, also known as the “Stop the Sexualization of Children Act," defines "sexually oriented material" as anything that "includes any depiction, description or simulation of sexually explicit conduct" — or "involves gender dysphoria or transgenderism."

If passed, the bill would prevent any public school from stocking or teaching LGBTQ+ literature or books that specifically mention trans people. It would also apply to some federally-funded sex education programs, clubs and support groups.

Library books stock imageCredit: Getty

Last year, an analysis from PEN America, a nonprofit organization that raises awareness about book censorship in the United States, analyzed the 4,218 unique titles banned in the country's public schools during the 2023-2024 school year and found that 29% of total banned titles during the school year featured LGBTQ+ people, characters or themes.

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Additionally, 28% of banned titles about the LGBTQ+ community specifically featured transgender and/or genderqueer characters, with more than half of banned LGBTQ+ books featuring communities of color.

“This targeted censorship amounts to a harmful assault on historically marginalized and underrepresented populations — a dangerous effort to erase their stories, achievements and history from schools,” senior manager of PEN America’s Freedom to Read program Sabrina Baêta said at the time.

H. R. 7661 specifically notes that it does not prohibit federal funds from being used for "standard science courses (biology, anatomy, genetics, etc.), teaching major world religions, classic works of literature and classic works of art.”

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However, it also denotes that "classic works of literature" is limited to books included in Great Books of the Western World, published in 1990, and two different reading lists titled "Classics Every Middle Schooler Should Read" from Compass Classroom. Similarly, "classic works of art" is limited to those found in five specific volumes of the Smarthistory AP Art History guide.

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