Some experts argue Project 2025’s directions for education policy are “interpretable through the lens of white Christian nationalism,” with multiple proposals aimed at “ethno-traditionalism and protecting the freedoms of a very narrowly defined ‘us.’” Project 2025 advocates for securing a conservative version of parental rights and advancing right-wing ideology in schools and libraries, while restricting the rights of LGBTQ and other children.
The book’s foreword by Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts states that American “children suffer the toxic normalization of transgenderism with drag queens and pornography invading their school libraries.” It further equates materials with “transgender ideology” to “pornography” and argues that they have “no claim to First Amendment protection,” adding that “educators and public librarians who purvey it should be classed as registered sex offenders.” Project 2025 also attacks efforts to teach about racial equality, alleging that critical race theory — a university-level academic framework used for studying the impacts of systemic racism — disrupts “the values that hold communities together such as equality under the law and colorblindness.”
Right-wing media outrage campaigns vilifying teachers, public school curricula, critical race theory, and public school library collections have helped spur unprecedented levels of actions taken to censor books.
As New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait wrote in 2023, “Over the past three years, legislators in 28 states have passed at least 71 bills controlling what teachers and students can say and do at school.” The American Library Association reported “efforts to censor 4,240 unique book titles in schools and libraries” in 2023 — a 65% increase from the year before — which disproportionately targeted books “representing the voices and lived experiences of LGBTQIA+ and BIPOC individuals.” Simultaneously, Republican-led states have increased efforts to blur the line between church and state by injecting Christian rhetoric and guidance into public schools.
Since 2021, policies or legislation enforcing a conservative agenda in public schools have been authorized by the Republican-controlled legislatures, boards of education, state superintendents of public instruction, or GOP governors in the following states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming. These measures include:
- Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signed SB 34, which allows public schools and charters to offer “elective social studies courses on ‘the Hebrew scriptures, the Old Testament and the New Testament.’” According to GOP state Rep. Ben Baker, the bill’s co-sponsor, it “specifies that the Bible can be taught as an elective from a historical perspective in our public schools” and “will provide the opportunity for our kids to have a better understanding of US History.” [Twitter/X, 7/7/23; KMOV, 6/19/23]
- In June, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry signed legislation requiring the Ten Commandments to be displayed in every public school classroom. The law’s text describes the Ten Commandments as “foundational documents of our state and national government.” The commandments will be displayed with a “context statement” describing how they “were a prominent part of American public education for almost three centuries,” and will be in state classrooms by the start of 2025. [The Guardian, 6/19/24]
- In 2022, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed an executive order to remove critical race theory from public school curricula. While “there is no evidence that CRT has been formally adopted into state curricula,” AP explained, Youngkin’s office claimed the executive order was intended to “restore excellence in education by ending the use of divisive concepts, including Critical Race Theory, in public education.” [The Associated Press, 2/15/22; The Guardian, 1/16/22]
- Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb signed SB 202, which restricts granting tenure at public institutions “if certain conditions related to free inquiry, free expression and intellectual diversity are not met.” The new bill gives state university boards of trustees, many of them appointed by Holcomb, authority to determine if public institutions are living up to the bill’s standard of “free inquiry” and “free expression.” Some Indiana professors protested the bill, with a joint statement by state chapters of the American Association of University Professors saying, “These measures would severely constrain academic freedom.” [Fox59 News, 3/13/24; Inside Higher Ed, 2/21/24]
- Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill targeting critical race theory that promised to keep any “currently controversial issue” out of Texas public schools. The law decrees that teachers “may not be compelled to discuss a widely debated and currently controversial issue of public policy or social affairs.” The law does not define a “controversial issue,” though it also reportedly “requires at least one teacher and one campus administrator at each school district to attend a civics training program that will teach educators how race and racism should be taught in Texas schools.” [The Texas Tribune, 12/2/21]
- In April, Idaho Gov. Brad Little signed House Bill 710, requiring public and school libraries to relocate “harmful” materials “to a section designated for adults only.” The law could impact content with LGBTQ themes, as Forbes noted that Idaho’s law features “a broad definition of ‘harmful to minors’ … including any act of homosexuality.” Now at least one library is “adults only.” [Idaho Capital Sun, 4/10/24; Forbes, 5/23/24]
- That same month, Idaho Gov. Brad Little signed House Bill 538, which “bars teachers from referring to a student by a name or pronoun that doesn’t align with their birth sex, unless the teacher has parental consent.” The law also authorizes teachers to sue if they believe they’ve been punished for refusing to use a student’s requested name or pronouns. [Idaho Capital Sun, 4/9/24]
- Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed HB 1069, which restricts materials containing “sexual conduct” from Florida classrooms, in 2023. In one Florida county, the school district reportedly removed more than 1,600 books from classrooms after the law’s enactment, including Anne Frank’s The Diary of a Young Girl, some dictionaries, and biographies on Thurgood Marshall, the first Black Supreme Court justice. In August, publishing companies sued the state, saying the law created a “regime of strict censorship” in Florida public schools. [The Guardian, 1/11/24; The New York Times, 8/29/24]
- In July, Oklahoma State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters issued guidelines for including the Bible in public school curricula. According to Oklahoma Voice, the rules require “students to analyze literary elements of biblical stories and to identify how those have impacted Western culture.” In an announcement about the guidelines, Walters said, “The Bible is indispensable in understanding the development of Western civilization and American history.” [Oklahoma Voice, 7/24/24]
- North Carolina’s Republican-led legislature in April made it illegal to talk to kindergarten through fourth grade students about sexuality and gender identity. Schools are also required to tell parents if a student changes their pronouns. Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed the bill in 2023, but the state’s Republican supermajority overrode the governor’s decision, passing the bill into law. [Spectrum News, 12/22/23]
- South Carolina’s State Board of Education gained broad powers in 2024 to ban instructional materials, including library books, that are deemed not “age and developmentally appropriate.” The regulation vaguely defines acceptable material as “topics, messages, materials, and teaching methods suitable to particular ages or age groups of children and adolescents, based on developing cognitive, emotional, and behavioral capacity typical for the age or age group.” Materials are automatically deemed unacceptable if they include descriptions or depictions of “sexual conduct.” Greenville County Schools has paused book fairs, while the schools “explore ways to continue offering book fairs in the future” under these new guidelines. [Popular Information, 6/24/24; Book Riot, 6/18/24; Greenville News, 8/22/24]