House Republicans introduce nationwide book ban legislation

Hours after the State of the Union address, House Republicans have introduced H.R. 7661, a bill aimed at prohibiting federal funds for materials deemed sexually oriented in schools. The legislation, known as the Stop the Sexualization of Children Act, targets content including topics related to gender dysphoria and transgenderism.

On February 26, 2026, following the State of the Union address, House Representative Mary Miller (Republican, Illinois) introduced House Resolution 7661 (H.R. 7661), also called the 'Stop the Sexualization of Children Act.' The bill seeks to amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 by barring the use of 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.' Seventeen additional representatives cosponsored the legislation.

The bill defines 'sexually oriented material' to include references to 'gender dysphoria or transgenderism,' as well as 'lewd' and 'lascivious' dancing. Critics, including Book Riot's Kelly Jensen, argue that this vague language mirrors state-level policies used to restrict books on LGBTQ+ topics in public schools and libraries. For instance, Katy Independent School District in Texas recently banned over 140 LGBTQ+ books under a policy targeting 'sexually explicit materials' and 'gender fluidity.' In South Carolina, Greenville Public Library prohibited books with 'trans' themes for those under 18, a restriction later expanded in York County Library to include 'gender identity' content. The American Civil Liberties Union of South Carolina has sued over the Greenville ban on behalf of library patrons.

Similar state efforts, such as Iowa's Senate File 496 and Idaho's House Bill 710, are facing lawsuits. Book Riot reports that while the bill applies to institutions receiving Elementary and Secondary Education Act funds, it could extend to public libraries. The outlet urges contacting House representatives to oppose the measure, describing it as part of broader efforts against transgender rights under the Trump-Vance administration. The full text of H.R. 7661, including cosponsors, is available for review.

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Realistic depiction of Ohio GOP lawmakers promoting HB 693 on child welfare and parental gender affirmation rights, with Democrats declining comment outside the Statehouse.
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Ohio Democrats decline comment on GOP bill limiting child-welfare actions tied to a parent’s refusal to affirm a child’s gender identity

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Ohio Republican lawmakers have introduced House Bill 693, dubbed the “Affirming Families First Act,” which would bar child-protection investigations and certain custody-related restrictions when the only issue is a parent’s insistence on a child’s biological sex. Ohio’s top Democratic legislative leaders declined to take a position when contacted by The Daily Wire, which also linked the debate to President Donald Trump’s remarks about a Virginia custody dispute during his Feb. 24, 2026, State of the Union address.

Two Ohio House Republicans have introduced the “Affirming Families First Act,” which would state that referring to and raising a child in line with the child’s biological sex—such as using a child’s given name and sex-based pronouns—cannot, by itself, be treated as abuse, neglect, or contrary to a child’s best interests in certain custody-related decisions.

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The Washington State House of Representatives has held a public hearing on House Bill 2112, known as the Keep Our Children Safe Act, which aims to restrict minors' access to online sexual material. Introduced by Rep. Mari Leavitt, the bill would require websites with significant harmful content for minors to verify users' ages using government-issued IDs. Critics have raised concerns about privacy and vague definitions in the legislation.

Sen. Bill Hagerty has reintroduced legislation to expand the federal ban on foreign-national political spending to cover ballot measures, voter registration, ballot collection and other get-out-the-vote activities. Election-integrity advocacy groups Americans for Public Trust and the Honest Elections Project back the effort.

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The House Administration Committee voted Wednesday, January 14, 2026, to advance Rep. Bryan Steil’s Stop Insider Trading Act, with Republicans in favor and Democrats opposed. The bill would bar members of Congress and their spouses and dependent children from buying individual securities while in office, require public advance notice ahead of stock sales, and allow continued investing in diversified funds and dividend reinvestment, according to the bill text and accounts of the markup.

A U.S. District Court judge has issued a permanent injunction against California's policy requiring teachers to conceal students' gender transitions from parents. The ruling, from Judge Roger T. Benitez, stems from a class-action lawsuit filed by two Christian teachers. It affirms parents' and teachers' constitutional rights to share and receive information on students' gender identity.

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The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on June 27, 2025, that Montgomery County, Maryland, parents seeking religious accommodations are entitled to opt their elementary-aged children out of lessons that use certain LGBTQ-themed storybooks—an interim win in a case brought by families including Chris and Melissa Persak. The decision, in Mahmoud v. Taylor, overturned lower courts and directed that a preliminary injunction issue while litigation proceeds.

 

 

 

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