Censorship at the
source: the worst kind
by Paul McMasters
Maximum access to government information is
a fundamental right and a shared responsibility of
both the press and the public. Despite that, freedom
of information is in deep trouble today. And because
it is in deep trouble, democracy is in deep trouble.
The public and the press alike must recognize that
delay and denial of access to government
information is in fact censorship. It is censorship of
the most insidious sort because it is censorship at the
source.
This form of censorship starts at the very top.
Washington, D.C., the capital of the open society, is
awash in secrecy and efforts to keep information
from the American people. Just a few examples:
Reps. Tom Davis and Jim Moran of Virginia
introduced legislation that would exempt exchanges
of information between the federal government and
private businesses from the federal Freedom of
Information Act. Supposedly, the bill would prevent
cyber attacks against critical infrastructure. So they
propose to blow a real hole in the FOIA rather than
patch a possible hole in our cyber security.
This same sort of cyber-panic resulted in a massive
compromise of the people’s right to know last
summer when a bill was rushed into law to prevent
the EPA from making information available to
millions of citizens living in the shadow of 30,000
chemical facilities — information crucial to their
own health and safety.
Also last year, Congress slashed funds to put a halt
to the declassification of massive stores of secrets no
longer considered injurious to national security but
of great importance to historians, researchers and
ordinary citizens. The story is just as sad at the state level. In the past
three years, journalists and concerned citizens in a
dozen states have conducted FOI audits of
government agencies, with alarming findings.
Routinely and regularly, government officials are
violating the states’ sunshine laws by refusing to
turn over records requested by citizens.
These audits have demonstrated three things:
Ignorance of the people about their rights,
ignorance of public officials about their
responsibilities under the law, and unwillingness by
attorneys general to punish the offenders. But it is at
the local level, where the actions of government are
most likely to intersect with the day-to-day lives of
Americans, that we find the most depressing attitudes toward access.
If there is any doubt just how closed a society we
have become, here are some things officials on city
and county councils, commissions and boards do to
shut out the people:
¦ They go into secret sessions.
¦ They conduct “virtual” meetings by telephone, fax
or e-mail.
¦ They meet in small, less-than-quorum groups.
¦ They won’t accept agenda suggestions from the
public.
¦ They impose onerous requirements for a citizen
to get an issue on the agenda.
¦ They won’t allow negative comments about
public officials or employees by name.
¦ They won’t allow citizens to speak about certain
topics or more than one topic.
¦ They strictly limit the amount of time a citizen
can speak.
¦ They remove
citizens from the
room or make
them sit down if
they are not
deemed to be
speaking in a
respectful or
deferential
manner.
¦ They conduct the
people’s business
during “retreats,”
professional
gatherings or
other meetings
remote from the community.
¦ They require the city or county attorneys to look
after their interests rather than the interests of
the taxpayers.
¦ To add insult to injury, they justify these actions
as being for the people, rather than their own
convenience and comfort. Thus:
¦ They exploit the panic over personal privacy to
put even more information out of reach.
¦ They describe government information as a
revenue source and turn it over to private
vendors, explaining that they are making money
when in fact they are compelling the taxpayers to
pay for the same information twice.
¦ They refuse to disseminate information unless
forced to, and do not fully or effectively utilize
new technologies to make more information
available more quickly.
It all adds up to the shutting of the public out of the
political and governmental process on a massive
scale and gives the lie to the whole idea of an open
society.
How did we get to this?
The primary culprits, of course, are government
officials who develop a proprietary attitude toward
information. Information truly is power. It’s also a
nuisance to spend time and resources on sharing it
with the taxpayers who footed the bill for its
collection in the first place. But the American press
also bears some blame for this sorry lack of access to
information. Government officials always have tried
to control the journalists — for reasons good and
bad.
From the beginnings of this nation, the method of
control was primarily censorship. Early on, the
fledgling nation’s security was the rationale of
choice for punishing the press and shutting it down
for the dissemination of inconvenient information.
From the time of John Peter Zenger on, journalists
were routinely jailed and censored.
While censorship could be justified more easily
during wartime, however, it gradually became a
tougher proposition during peacetime. Although
there were no significant pro-First Amendment
decisions by the Supreme Court until after World
War I the idea of a free and independent press in
fact, as well as on paper, gradually began to take
hold.
So as overt censorship of the press by the
government became more difficult, other methods
of keeping the press in line had to be perfected.
Thus, withholding of government information and
secrecy became a high art, including propaganda,
disinformation, and news management — all the
tools that one normally associates with a
dictatorship.
What government could not accomplish by
punishing the press it learned to accomplish by
starving the press. This was a different brand of
censorship — at the source — but censorship
nonetheless. And it was a frontal attack on the
Jeffersonian principle of an informed citizenry. Of
course, it wasn’t about the press at all. But the press
fell into the trap of taking it personally and forever
damaged the cause of access by acting as if this was
about the press and not about the people and basic
democratic principles.
At a time when many Americans think of the press
as part of the problem rather than part of the
solution, delay and denial of access offers an
opportunity for the press to change that perception.
The press must do a better job of holding
government officials to account on excessive secrecy.
The press can start by recognizing that freedom of
information is not “inside baseball” but a right of the people. Then it can make the case that denial and
delay of access are forms of censorship as pernicious
and anti-democratic as burning books and jailing
journalists.
Indeed, there is no justification for censorship in a
democratic society. All censorship is bad, but
censorship of the press is particularly threatening.
Censorship of books and other media generally has
to do with sex and other naughtiness. Censorship of
the press, on the other hand, almost always has to
do with suppression of the truth about our
governance and the things that affect our daily lives
and livelihoods in profound ways.
So what do we do? I don’t pretend to have all the
answers but I do have some proposals. Here are just
a few things the press can do:
¦ Muster as much outrage on behalf of the public as
it does for itself.
¦ Cover FOI issues much better and more regularly
than it does now.
¦ Make sure articles made possible by FOI laws
make that clear
to readers and
listeners.
¦ Editorialize on
freedom of
information
issues.
¦ Watch lawmakers
and lawmaking
concerning
access more
closely.
¦ Conduct an audit
of public officials’
compliance with
sunshine laws.
¦ Recognize good
work by citizens and political leaders in opening
up government meetings and records.
¦ Go to court to assert the public’s access rights
more often.
Here are some things that the public can do:
¦ Demand to know the positions on access of
candidates for office.
¦ Attend public meetings and speak up.
¦ Request public records regularly.
¦ Hold elected officials at all levels accountable on
their access policies.
¦ Support laws that open up government meetings
and records.
¦ Be persistent and insist on being heard. And while we’re handing out assignments, here are
some for public officials, too:
¦ They need to begin with a presumption that
records and meetings are open.
¦ They need to resist a proprietary attitude toward
public records and a dismissive attitude toward
citizens’ right of access.
¦ They need to view citizen requests for
information as an opportunity to involve more
people in the political process and their own
governance.
¦ They need to find ways to make more information
available to more people — without their having
to ask for it.
¦ They need to recognize that an informed citizen is
a more trusting citizen. A more trusting citizen is
a more involved citizen. And a more involved
citizen is the foundation of good government.
Why does it matter? It matters because in an
environment of secrecy and information
suppression, citizens grow increasingly distrustful of
their leaders, increasingly unsupportive of decisions
made behind closed doors, increasingly suspicious
of secrets locked away in files, and increasingly
angry at bureaucratic resistance to granting access
to even the most routine records.
In such an environment, paranoia and conspiracy
theories thrive, and opportunities for improving
government policies and practices go begging. In
such an environment, it is not just the dream of
democracy but the reality of democracy that begins
to shrivel and confront the idea of a slow death.
This is an edited version of a speech Paul
McMasters gave in receiving the John Peter and
Anna Catherine Zenger Award from the University
of Arizona. McMasters is the First Amendment
Ombudsman at the First Amendment Center. He
may be contacted at
pmcmasters@freedomforum.org.
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