Proclamation 5776 --
Freedom of Information Day, 1988
By
the President of the
A
Proclamation
Freedom
of Information Day reminds us of some of our most important principles. ``We
the People,'' as the framers of the Constitution called us in the Preamble,
govern ourselves through representative government. All of us, of course, have
the right to do so. We are best able to do so when every citizen is informed on
matters of public importance and can therefore take full part in civic affairs
and in the exercise of fundamental rights. We can all be grateful indeed to the
Founders who through the Constitution -- including the Bill of Rights --
provided for freedoms for all Americans that make a well-informed electorate
possible.
No
one understood these principles more thoroughly than James Madison, our fourth
President, whose birthday, March 16, is the occasion for Freedom of Information
Day. Long before he became President, he served as chief recorder of the
Constitutional Convention; he was perhaps the most influential architect of our
charter of liberty and limited government. Throughout life he championed
conditions that could foster responsive government, such as a free press and a
vigorous flow of information among the public, tempered with the recognition
that for legitimate government to function, some matters must remain outside
the public domain. He maintained this balance eloquently when he helped draft
the Bill of Rights, and especially the First Amendment, while restricting
access to most of the documents that form the Constitutional record.
Two
centuries later,
On
the anniversary of President Madison's birth, let us celebrate our history and
heritage of freedom of information by remembering and revering the life and
example of this wise and generous patriot and lover of liberty.
The
Congress, by Senate Joint Resolution 126, has designated
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this sixteenth day of March, in
the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register,