Nov 26, 2025
Via #RawStory

Supreme Court hits Trump w/ delay as prez attempts 2 fire #LegislativeOfficer
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The US #SupremeCourt declined 2 immediately permit Prez #Trump to fire #RegisterOfCopyrights #ShiraPerlmutter from her post inside the #LibraryOfCongress.

A federal appeals court ruled #ToddBlanche could not fire the Register of Copyrights without input from #Congress because the #LibrarianOfCongress & the Register of Copyrights were "legislative officers."

https://www.rawstory.com/trump-supreme-court-copyrights/

Supreme Court hits Trump with delay as president attempts to fire legislative officer

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to immediately permit President Donald Trump to fire Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter from her post inside the Library of Congress.Earlier this year, Trump removed Carla Hayden, the Librarian of Congress appointed by President Joe Biden, and replaced her with h...

Raw Story

In Praise of Librarians in Dangerous Times – Literary Hub

– The Keynote address at the American Librarian’s Association annual convention, June 28th, 2025

Sarah Weinman

Sarah Weinman is the author of three nonfiction books: The Real Lolita, Scoundrel, and Without Consent (Ecco, November 2025). She is also the editor of several anthologies, most recently Evidence of Things Seen: True Crime in an Era of Reckoning. Weinman writes the Crime & Mystery column for the New York Times Book Review and lives in New York City.

Sarah Weinman on the Awesome Responsibility of the Seekers and Keepers of Truth

By Sarah Weinman, November 3, 2025

Librarians are on the front lines of history and current events, when news and change arrive at a furious clip that only quickens every day.

And without libraries, my work would simply not exist.

I was a child who read books. There’s a picture of me, not quite a year old, in a blue sailor suit and a red ribbon tied around my neck, staring avidly at a picture book. I couldn’t have been reading yet—that wouldn’t happen until I was close to three, still plenty precocious—but the devotion was already there, the calling always present. I would always prefer reading to pretty much anything, whether it was practicing piano, doing homework, playing sports, and chores.

Books were everywhere as I grew up, and I know how fortunate I was. All around the house, because my parents and older brother were avid readers, too. In the sprawling home of my great-uncle, who spent many years as a sales representative for Harper & Row—before it was absorbed into HarperCollins, now my own publisher—and the duplex townhouses of my grandparents.

Going to the library was special, though. The elementary and high school ones, staffed by people who understood what books meant to kids because they’d never lost sight of what books meant to them. The local branch, a few minutes’ drive from my home, where I borrowed countless books at every age and had my first formative experience with microfilm—and no matter how many times I have used it, I still need to ask a librarian for help. The flagship location in my hometown, with its brutalist architecture, piles of newspapers threatening to burst out of the shelves, and the abundance of books in every genre—particularly crime fiction, my first and still greatest love.

The university one, where not only could I request any book I needed for research—for class, and also my own—but I discovered the almighty power of the Lexis-Nexis database. And, when I moved to New York more than two decades ago, the magisterial 42nd Street Public Library, those twin lions beckoning visitors to climb up the stairs and partake of its treasures.

The wonder and thrill of the library hasn’t gone away for me, not at all, but it has certainly evolved in adulthood. I have come to know so many archive repositories, sifting through collections of authors, editors, and other luminaries as part of my research for three nonfiction books, several anthologies, and other journalism projects. Some of the institutions whose work I have benefited from enormously, visiting in person or requesting digital reproductions, include the Sterling Library at Yale University; the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; the New-York Historical; city and state archives in New Jersey, Oregon, Maryland, New York, and right here in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and the Berg Collection at the New York Public Library.

The wonder and thrill of the library hasn’t gone away for me, not at all, but it has certainly evolved in adulthood.

And it was at Columbia University’s Rare Books and Manuscripts Library in early 2016 that I experienced one of the most transcendent experiences of my working life. I’d arrived to look at a selection of letters by the book editor and translator Sophie Wilkins, and what I thought would be anodyne correspondence between an editor and her author—the convicted murderer Edgar Smith—turned out to be anything but, altering the scope and trajectory of the project that would become my second book, Scoundrel. The excitement I felt at reading what perhaps three others—Sophie, Edgar, and the librarian cataloging the material—that I could not express in public, but could convey in book form, was like nothing I’d ever experienced.

Libraries and archives hold so much knowledge within their sacred confines. I will never lose sight of the awesome responsibility for those tasked with curating, maintaining, and presenting the information so that researchers and authors like me can make meaning of these documents. The librarian is a seeker and keeper of truth, and that makes her a dangerous figure in the eyes of those who fear the fullest, most comprehensive, and most uncomfortable truths emerging.

The librarian is a seeker and keeper of truth, and that makes her a dangerous figure in the eyes of those who fear the fullest, most comprehensive, and most uncomfortable truths emerging.

This is as precarious a moment as I’ve experienced in my own lifetime. Book bans accelerating at a pace that beggars belief. The unjust firing of Dr. Carla Hayden, the Librarian of Congress. The onrush to embrace generative AI without considering the consequences. And just yesterday, a terrible Supreme Court ruling that threatens to upend what books are taught in schools and available in their libraries.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Literary Hub » In Praise of Librarians in Dangerous Times

#Books #CarlaHayden #ChildrenReading #CurrentEvents #DangerousTimes #History #Librarian #LibrarianOfCongress #Librarians #LiteraryHub #News #SocietyChanges #TaughtInSchools

Carla Hayden, former Librarian of Congress, speaks on her dismissal, the future of libraries at Philadelphia event – WHYY

Carla Hayden, 14th Librarian of Congress, spoke with Ashley Jordan, president and CEO of the African American Museum in Philadelphia, at an event at the Free Library of Philadelphia Central Branch on June 28, 2025. (Emily Neil / WHYY) (Screenshot)

Carla Hayden, former Librarian of Congress, speaks on her dismissal, the future of libraries at Philadelphia event

Hayden, both the first woman and first Black person to head the Library of Congress, was fired by President Donald Trump in May.

By Emily Neil, Updated Jun. 30, 2025 6:02 pm, Listen 1:17

Former Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden spoke at the Free Library of Philadelphia Parkway Central Branch on Saturday night, where she sat down for a fireside chat with Ashley Jordan, president and CEO of the African American Museum in Philadelphia.

Hayden, both the first woman and the first Black person to head the Library of Congress, was fired by President Donald Trump on May 8 in a two-sentence email.

In a conversation that touched on her career, her accomplishments and her abrupt dismissal, Hayden said she is hopeful about the future of public libraries and freedom of expression despite nationwide pushes for book bans and attacks on cultural institutions.

“I’ve been able to be part of opening up the world to more people and to help them see themselves in the world and in the past, so they can do their future,” Hayden said. “And that is a wonderful thing to think about, that you’ve been part of … All of what we do in these types of organizations, that’s what we’re doing. We’re betting on the future. And so I was glad that I was able to do that at the Library of Congress.”

In his introductory remarks, Kelly Richards, president and director of the Free Library of Philadelphia, said that Hayden has always been a “tireless advocate” for the library systems throughout her career. He said libraries are not just “repositories of knowledge” in a democratic society, but “vibrant centers of community life, education and inclusion.”

“Libraries have a reputation for being a quiet place, but not tonight,” Richards said, as audience members gave Hayden and Jordan a standing ovation when they entered the stage.

Read more: Carla Hayden, former Librarian of Congress, speaks on her dismissal, the future of libraries at Philadelphia event – WHYYSource Links: Fired Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden speaks in Philadelphia – WHYY

https://whyy.org/articles/carla-hayden-former-librarian-congress-speaks-dismissal-future-of-libraries-philadelphia/

#2025 #AfricanAmericanMuseumInPhiladelphia #America #AshleyJordan #Books #CarlaDayden #DonaldTrump #EmilyNeil #FreeLibraryOfPhiladelphia #Health #History #LibrarianOfCongress #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Philadelphia #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #WHYY

Trump Is Waging a Culture War on the Library of Congress. It’s Been Done Before. – Politico

History Dept.
Trump Is Waging a Culture War on the Library of Congress. It’s Been Done Before.

A visitor tours the Main Reading Room in the Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress on Oct. 8, 2012. | Alex Wong / Getty Images

Thomas Jefferson wanted to donate his personal collection of books to the Library of Congress. But critics thought those books were un-American.

By Rebecca Brenner Graham, 05/18/2025 04:00 PM EDT

Rebecca Brenner Graham is author of Dear Miss Perkins: A Story of Frances Perkins’s Efforts to Aid Refugees from Nazi Germany (Kensington, January 2025) and a postdoctoral research associate at Brown University, coordinating Brown 2026: Marking 250 Years of American Democracy.

On May 8, President Donald Trump abruptly fired Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, because, as White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt claimed, Hayden “did not fit the needs of the American people.”

“There were quite concerning things that she had done at the Library of Congress in the pursuit of DEI and putting inappropriate books in the library for children,” Leavitt said, “and we don’t believe that she was serving the interest of the American taxpayer.”

First, the Library of Congress is primarily a research library where patrons must be 16 years or older to do research on site. Still, Trump’s firing of Hayden was just the latest move that made books and libraries a front in the administration’s culture war against diversity, equity and inclusion.

But in fact, a war has already been waged over the books in the Library of Congress’ collection and whether they aligned with broader ideas of American identity — over whether the books should defer to tradition or show openness to new ideas and different cultures. There was already a declared winner of that war — and ironically, Trump is placing himself at odds with the vision that won and has defined the collection since the early 1800s.

The original Library of Congress was founded in 1800 inside the Capitol and contained a small collection mostly made up of legal texts and parliamentary proceedings for lawmakers to consult. In August 1814, amid the War of 1812, British troops burned the Executive Mansion, the Capitol — including the library — and other public buildings in Washington.

The second-ever Librarian of Congress, Patrick Magruder, was on vacation, and his second-in-command, Assistant Librarian J. T. Frost, was responsible for looking after the library. Frost received advanced notice of the burning in time to send a trusted assistant with four oxen and a cart carrying one copy of each book to safety in northern Virginia. With one copy of each book carted to safety, no knowledge was lost when their duplicates burned.

Read more: Trump Is Waging a Culture War on the Library of Congress. It’s Been Done Before. – PoliticoSource Links: Carla Hayden Firing: The Library of Congress Has Always Been a Battleground for American Culture Wars – POLITICO

#2025 #America #Books #CarlaHayden #DonaldTrump #History #LibrarianOfCongress #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Politico #Politics #Resistance #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

Trump Is Waging a Culture War on the Library of Congress. It’s Been Done Before. – Politico

History Dept.Trump Is Waging a Culture War on the Library of Congress. It’s Been Done Before. A visitor tours the Main Reading Room in the Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress on Oc…

DrWeb's Domain
'“The current #LibrarianOfCongress Carla Hayden is woke, anti-Trump, and promotes trans-ing kids,” AAF said on its X account earlier Thursday, just hours before the firing was made public. “It’s time to get her OUT and hire a new guy for the job!”'
https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-library-of-congress-carla-hayden-20a1862ce6d2e0d51a84a37b264ce2ef
President Trump fires Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden

President Donald Trump has fired Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden as the White House continues to purge the federal government of those perceived to oppose the Republican president and his agenda. Hayden was notified in an email late Thursday from the White House’s Presidential Personnel Office. The top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro, says Hayden was “callously fired” by Trump and demands an explanation. Hayden was the first woman and the first African American to be librarian of Congress. Hayden says libraries changed her life and opened her to the world. Hayden is a graduate of Roosevelt University and the University of Chicago.

AP News

Die deutschen Bibliotheksverbände haben eine gemeinsame Stellungnahme zur Kündigung von Carla Hayden und zu den anderen aktuellen Vorkommnissen in den USA veröffentlicht: https://www.bibliotheksverband.de/sites/default/files/2025-05/Stellungnahme%20der%20deutschen%20Bibliotheksverb%C3%A4nde%20zur%20K%C3%BCndigung%20von%20Carla%20Hayden_20250513_final.pdf

#carlahayden #librarianofcongress #bibliotheksverbände #stellungnahme #stoptrump

Ein Laien-Trio für die Library of Congress

Ein neuer Acting Librarian of Congress, sein neuer Stellvertreter und ein neuer Acting Director of Copyright Office Hat die Demokratin in ihrem ...

Bibliothekarisch.de

I took this photo in 2016 when Dr. Carla Hayden's name was being carved into the wall of the Thomas Jefferson building of the Library of Congress -- adding her to the short list of Librarians of Congress. I'm still reeling from her being removed from her position.

#LibraryofCongress #CarlaHayden #LibrarianofCongress

Statement from American Association of #LawLibraries (#AALL) on the firings of
#LibrarianOfCongress Dr. Carla Hayden & #RegisterOfCopyrights Shira Perlmutter.

#libraries #law #racism #sexism #idiocracy #Trump

Erste Stellungnahme eines deutschen Bibliotheksverbandes zur Entlassung der Librarian of Congress und der Leiterin des Copyright Office - Herzlichen Dank dafür an den @VDB_Vorstand

https://www.vdb-online.org/entlassung-von-dr-carla-hayden-direktorin-der-library-of-congress/

#statement #librarianofcongress #directorofcopyrightoffice #usa #stoptrump

Entlassung von Dr. Carla Hayden, Direktorin der Library of Congress, und Shira Perlmutter, Leiterin des Copyright Office an der LoC – VDB – Verein Deutscher Bibliothekarinnen und Bibliothekare e.V.