Librarians launch campaigns for state offices amid book challenges

Several librarians across the United States are running for state legislative seats in 2026 elections. Motivated by anti-library legislation and book bans, they aim to advocate for public institutions from within government. Their campaigns highlight libraries' role in fostering education and community access.

Librarians like India May in Iowa, Michelle Conners in Maine, Matt Gile in Vermont, Lindsey Patrick-Wright in Tennessee, and Ellen Paul in Connecticut have entered politics this year. They cite ongoing attacks on libraries, including book censorship efforts and restrictive laws, as key reasons for their runs. For instance, May, a former rural library director, filed to represent Iowa House District 58 after advocating against book bans at a town hall. Her election is scheduled for June 2, 2026.

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News illustration of election wins and results in Wisconsin Supreme Court race and Georgia special election, highlighting Democratic performance with celebrating crowds and maps.
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Democrats show strong gains in Wisconsin and Georgia elections

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Voters in Wisconsin and Georgia delivered wins for Democrats on Tuesday, continuing a trend of overperformance since the 2024 presidential election. Liberal Chris Taylor won a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, expanding the court's liberal majority to 5-2. In Georgia's 14th Congressional District, Republican Clay Fuller defeated Democrat Sean Harris in a special election runoff.

The American Library Association has published its list of the 11 most challenged books in US libraries for 2025. The report documents a surge in challenges, with 4,235 unique titles targeted, the second-highest number on record. Most challenges came from pressure groups and officials, not individual parents.

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Candidates who have questioned or denied past election outcomes are running in 23 states — including five presidential battlegrounds — for statewide offices that can play roles in administering or certifying elections, according to a new analysis by States United Action shared with NPR.

Democrats see opportunities in a handful of Republican-held seats in 2026, but the Senate’s arithmetic means multiple wins could still fall short of a governing majority.

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Iowa Democrats emerged from the June 2 primaries with State Auditor Rob Sand as their nominee for governor and state Rep. Josh Turek as their nominee for U.S. Senate, setting up two high-profile general-election races in a state Republicans have dominated in recent cycles.

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