Politics & Government

KY Republican lawmaker files anti-DEI legislation for K-12 public schools

Kentucky Legislative Research Commission, Public Information Office
Kentucky Legislative Research Commission, Public Information Office Ky LRC, Public Information-Hargi

A bill filed by a Republican state senator on the first day of 2026 General Assembly attempts to ban diversity, equity and inclusion practices in Kentucky’s K-12 public schools.

Senate Bill 26 filed by Sen. Lindsey Tichenor, R-Smithfield, would apply to the Kentucky Department of Education, school districts and public schools.

“This bill is about fairness, transparency, and equal treatment under the law,” Tichenor said in a statement. “Every student and educator in Kentucky deserve to be treated as an individual—not sorted, labeled, or advantaged based on characteristics they cannot control.”.

The Act preserves core educational and constitutional protections and does not restrict instruction on historical oppression, academic research, or creative work, religious freedom, student speech or association, mental or physical health services, or compliance with narrowly tailored federal mandates, Tichenor’s statement said.

According to the bill, the department, school districts, public schools or cooperative boards must not provide any differential treatment or benefits to an individual, including an applicant for employment, promotion, or contract renewal, on the basis of the individual’s religion, race, sex, color or national origin.

Those entities also couldn’t do the following under the legislation:

  • Prioritize or provide preferential consideration for vendors, contracts or other transactions based upon the religion, race, sex, color, or national origin of the ownership, management, or staff of any business or nonprofit entity, except that the institution may provide preferential consideration for businesses owned by residents of Kentucky and the United States.
  • Establish or maintain a diversity, equity, and inclusion — also known as DEI — office, contract or employ an individual to serve as a DEI officer, provide DEI training, or maintain related initiatives.
  • Require or incentivize an individual to attend DEI training or provide any differential treatment or benefits to an individual based on the individual’s participation in DEI.

The Attorney General could bring a civil action to compel schools to comply under the legislation.

The effort to eliminate and curb DEI offices and practices has been pushed by many conservatives, and since joining the Kentucky Senate in 2023, Tichenor has been an opponent of DEI initiatives. Senate Bill 165, a similar anti-DEI bill she filed in 2025 aimed at K-12 schools, did not move in the General Assembly.

But last year, the General Assembly approved House Bill 4 filed by Rep. Jennifer Decker, R-Waddy. It barred public colleges and universities from spending money on DEI initiatives and required those institutions to close DEI offices and eliminate all related staff by June 30, 2025. It also required all public colleges and universities to adopt a neutrality policy, prohibiting the schools from taking political stances.

On Tuesday, Fayette County Public Schools officials did not immediately comment about Senate Bill 26.

Jennifer Ginn, a spokesperson for the Kentucky Department of Education, declined to comment on Tuesday.

Speaking to an interim legislative committee in December, Tichenor noted that Fayette County and Jefferson County schools, the two largest districts in Kentucky, were the only ones statewide that did not sign a letter issued by President Donald Trump’s administration assuring federal officials they had eliminated diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

This story was originally published January 6, 2026 at 4:25 PM.

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Valarie Honeycutt Spears
Lexington Herald-Leader
Staff writer Valarie Honeycutt Spears covers K-12 education, social issues and other topics. She is a Lexington native with southeastern Kentucky roots.  Support my work with a digital subscription
Hannah Pinski
Lexington Herald-Leader
Hannah covers Kentucky politics, including the legislature and statewide constitutional offices, for the Lexington Herald-Leader. She joined the newspaper in December 2025 after covering Kentucky politics for the Louisville Courier Journal for almost two years. Hannah graduated from The University of Iowa in 2023 where she double-majored in Journalism and Music and minored in Political Science. 
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