Georgia House Minority leader speaks out on DEI ban bill that did not advance on Crossover Day
COLUMBUS,Ga (WRBL) — Senate Bill 120 did not advance on Crossover Day. Georgia House of Representatives Minority leader Carolyn Hugley says whenever they're able to stop a bill that would adversely affect the community, it is considered a win.
Senate Bill 120 was a bill that would have banned all public schools, colleges, and universities from engaging and operating DEI programs. This bill did not advance on Crossover Day.
Minority Leader Carolyn Hugley says she is happy her colleagues in the Senate decided not to put the bill forward.
Hugley says, 'It was really going to be a step back. And I continue to say that we cannot embrace hare and put hate into our laws because we know what that looks like and we've already been there before, and Georgia deserves better than that.'
Though the bill did not advance on Crossover Day, it is still alive and could be revisited later in the year.
The revisiting would require the author finding a similar code section in a House bill, script it out, and send it back for the house to agree or disagree on.
Hugley says revisiting legislation is usually difficult as more legislation is introduced.
'Anything can happen, and a bill can say it's about mom and apple pie in the subject, but it could be totally different,' Hugley explains
'We are in a moment where things can change drastically, if not for ourselves, for those who are coming along after us,' Hugley says. 'And so, it is our…moment to be involved or be engaged, to be alert to request or I should say, to demand of those who represent us to look out for the best interests of the communities that they have when we look at it.'
WRBL has reached out to Republican lawmakers and are still awaiting responses.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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