Voters Oppose Book Bans in Libraries

Polling Shows Voters Oppose Efforts to Remove Books from Libraries and Have Confidence in Libraries to Make Good Decisions About Their Collections

Read the key findings from a survey conducted by Hart Research Associates and North Star Opinion Research on behalf of the American Library Association among 1,000 voters and 472 parents of children in public school. The survey was conducted March 1 to 6, 2022, and the sample is demographically and geographically representative of U.S. voters and parents.

Voters Oppose Book Bans in Libraries (PDF)

Large majorities of voters (71%) oppose efforts to have books removed from their local public libraries, including a majority of Democrats (75%), independents (58%), and Republicans (70%). Most voters and parents hold librarians in high regard, have confidence in their local libraries to make good decisions about what books to include in their collections, and agree that libraries in their communities do a good job offering books that represent a variety of viewpoints.

 

Key Findings

1)  More than seven in 10 voters (71%) oppose efforts to remove books from public libraries, with majorities of voters across party lines opposed.

  • By a substantial 42-point margin, voters oppose efforts to have books removed from their local public libraries because some people find them offensive or inappropriate and do not think young people should be exposed to them: 71% oppose, 29% support. Majorities of Democrats (75%), independents (58%), and Republicans (70%) are opposed.
  • Parents also oppose efforts to remove books from their local public libraries by a significant 20-point margin: 60% oppose, 40% support.

Strong Opposition to Removing Books from Public Libraries

Would you support or oppose efforts to remove books from local public libraries because some people find them offensive or inappropriate and do not think young people should be exposed to them?

Survey question: Would you support or oppose efforts to remove books from local public libraries because some people find them offensive or inappropriate and do not think young people should be exposed to them?  All voters: Oppose: 71%; Support: 29%.   Democrats:  Oppose: 75%; Support: 25%.  Independents: Oppose: 58%; Support: 42%.  Republicans: Oppose: 70%; Support: 30%.

 

2) Large majorities oppose book removals in school libraries after hearing arguments from both sides.

  • After hearing reasons to both support and oppose efforts to remove books from school libraries because some parents find them offensive or inappropriate, voters oppose efforts to remove books from school libraries by a 34-point margin (67% oppose, 33% support).
  • Similarly, after hearing arguments on both sides, parents oppose efforts to remove books from school libraries by a 22-point margin (61% oppose, 39% support), and this view holds true for parents with children of all grade levels: 59% of parents with children in pre-K through 5th grade, 66% with middle schoolers, and 64% with high schoolers oppose book removals.

 

3) There is near-universal high regard for librarians and recognition of the important role that local public libraries and school libraries play in communities.

  • Nine in 10 voters (90%) and parents (92%) have a favorable opinion of librarians who work in local public libraries and school libraries, including 66% of voters and 65% of parents who are very favorable toward librarians.
  • The vast majority of voters (89%) and parents (93%) say local public libraries play an important role in communities across the country including their own, including 64% of voters and 70% of parents who believe they play a very important role.
  • At even higher rates, voters (92% important, 72% very important) and parents (95% important, 71% very important) say school libraries play an important role in public elementary, middle, and high schools.
  • Voters across the political spectrum have a keen sense of the importance of public libraries (95% of Democrats, 78% of independents, 87% of Republicans) and school libraries (96% of Democrats, 85% of independents, 91% of Republicans).

 

High Regard for Librarians and the Role Libraries Play in Communities and Schools

Survey question on the role public libraries play in communities:  All voters: Very important: 64%; Fairly important: 25%.  Parents: Very important: 70%; Fairly important: 23%.  Survey question on the role school libraries play in public elementary, middle, and high schools:  All voters: Very important: 72%; Fairly important: 21%.  Parents: Very important: 71%; Fairly important: 24%.  Survey question on the favorability of local public and school librarians:  All voters: 90%; All parents: 92%.

 

4) Most voters are confident in local public libraries to make good decisions about their collections and think libraries do a good job representing a variety of viewpoints.

  • Large majorities of voters (75%) and parents (80%) have quite a lot or a great deal of confidence in their local libraries to make good decisions about what books to include in their collections and make available in their communities.
  • Nearly eight in 10 voters (79%) and parents (79%) say libraries in their community do a good job of offering books that represent a variety of viewpoints, a sentiment held by majorities of Democrats (89%), independents (77%) and Republicans (70%), and by majorities of voters across demographic backgrounds. Only small proportions think libraries go too far in promoting books that present a liberal (16% voters, 17% parents) or conservative (5% voters and parents) point of view.

All voters:  16% believe the libraries in their community go too far promoting books with a liberal point of view. 5% believe the libraries in their community go too far promoting books with a conservative point of view. 79% believe the libraries in their community do a good job of offering books with a variety of viewpoint. Parents: 17% believe the libraries in their community go to far promoting books with a liberal point of view. 5% believe the libraries in their community go too far promoting books with a conservative point of view. 79% believe the libraries in their community do a good job of offering books with a variety of viewpoint.

  • Fully 83% of voters and 86% of parents say that they are more likely to trust librarians when they hear that librarians are trained to not impose their own thoughts and opinions on which ideas are right but to make knowledge and ideas available so that people have the freedom to choose what to read.

 

Belief that Libraries Do a Good Job Offering Books with Variety of Viewpoints

Voters Good job representing variety of viewpoints
All voters 79%
Democrats 89%
Independents 77%
Republicans 70%
Men 74%
Women 84%
White voters 79%
Black/African-American voters 83%
Hispanic/Latino voters 75%
Parents Good job representing variety of viewpoints
All parents 79%
Democratic parents 86%
Independent parents 83%
Republican parents 70%
Child in Pre-K-5th grade 78%
Child in 6th-8th grade 80%
Child in 9th-12th grade 79%
White parents 76%
Parents of color 83%

5) Parents express a high degree of confidence in school libraries’ decisions about their collections and very few think that school librarians ignore parents’ concerns.

  • Three in four parents (74%) have quite a lot or a great deal of confidence in public libraries in their local school district to make good decisions about what books to include in their collections.
  • Only 12% of parents say librarians in their district’s public school libraries ignore the concerns of parents. Majorities of parents (59%) say school librarians in their district generally listen to the concerns of parents and try to work with them if they have concerns; 29% of parents indicate that they do not know enough to say.

 

6) Voters and parents affirm the importance of giving young people access to books and not allowing individual parents to decide what books are available to other people’s children.

  • When presented with pairs of statements that represent different viewpoints about removing books from libraries, voters and parents consistently align with opponents of these removals by large margins:

Agreement with Viewpoints Against Removing Books from Libraries

Please indicate which one of the following statements you agree with more.

STATEMENT A: We need to protect the ability of young people to have access to books from which they can learn about and understand different perspectives, and help them grow into adults who can think for themselves.

STATEMENT B: We need to protect young people from books they might find upsetting or that reflect ideologies and lifestyles that are out of the mainstream.

82% of voters agree with the statement: We need to protect the ability of young people to have access books from which they can learn about and understand different perspectives, and help them grow into adults who can think for themselves.  81% of parents agree with the statement: We need to protect the ability of young people to have access books from which they can learn about and understand different perspectives, and help them grow into adults who can think for themselves.  18% of voters agree with the statement: We need to protect young people from books they might find upsetting or that reflect ideologies and lifestyles that are out of the mainstream.  19% of parents agree with the statement: We need to protect young people from books they might find upsetting or that reflect ideologies and lifestyles that are out of the mainstream.

STATEMENT A: Individual parents can set rules for their own children, but they do not have the right to decide for other parents what books are available to their children.

STATEMENT B: Parents have a right not to have their children exposed to objectionable books at the library, and should be able to join with other parents in having those books removed.

76% of voters agree with the statement: Individual parents can set rules for their own children, but they do not have the right to decide for other parents what books are available to their children. 24% of parents agree with the statement:Individual parents can set rules for their own children, but they do not have the right to decide for other parents what books are avaialble to their children. 72% of voters agree with the statement: Parents have a right not to have their children exposed to objectionable books at the library, and should be able to join with other parents in having those books removed. 28% of parents agree with the statement: Parents have a right not to have their children exposed to objectionable books at the library, and should be able to join with other parents in having those books removed.