Presidential Document2025-23416

Bill of Rights Day, 2025

Primary source

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Published
December 18, 2025
Signed
December 15, 2025

Issuing agencies

Executive Office of the President

Full Text

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 90 Issue 241 (Thursday, December 18, 2025)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 90, Number 241 (Thursday, December 18, 2025)]
[Presidential Documents]
[Pages 59363-59364]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2025-23416]



[[Page 59361]]

Vol. 90

Thursday,

No. 241

December 18, 2025

Part III





The President





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Proclamation 10997--Bill of Rights Day, 2025



Executive Order 14367--Designating Fentanyl as a Weapon of Mass 
Destruction


                        Presidential Documents 



Federal Register / Vol. 90 , No. 241 / Thursday, December 18, 2025 / 
Presidential Documents

___________________________________________________________________

Title 3--
The President

[[Page 59363]]

                Proclamation 10997 of December 15, 2025

                
Bill of Rights Day, 2025

                By the President of the United States of America

                A Proclamation

                Two hundred and fifty years ago, our Nation was 
                conceived in liberty, our freedom was wrested from the 
                hands of tyranny, and our people courageously united as 
                one Nation under God, committed to the immortal 
                principles of sovereignty, justice, and self-
                determination. Today, we proudly celebrate the 
                ratification of our Bill of Rights--the revolutionary 
                document that enshrines in law the principles of 
                freedom, human dignity, and due process upon which the 
                United States was founded. On this Bill of Rights Day, 
                we proudly carry forth the bold vision of our Founding 
                Fathers. We recommit to the timeless freedoms enshrined 
                in the Bill of Rights, and we vow to always preserve, 
                protect, and defend our God-given rights, our glorious 
                American heritage, and our constitutional way of life.

                Following the Revolutionary War, the framers of our 
                Constitution set aside 10 core protections from 
                government authority that would ultimately become known 
                as the ``Bill of Rights.'' After decades of oppression 
                under British rule, James Madison--the Father of the 
                Constitution--came to understand that it was necessary 
                to clearly define what freedoms the law protected, 
                setting the stage for the triumph of true self-
                government. Though Madison was once concerned that a 
                written bill of rights would not succeed in fending off 
                forces of tyranny and oppression, his friend Thomas 
                Jefferson later convinced him: ``A bill of rights is 
                what the people are entitled to against every 
                government on earth, general or particular, and what no 
                just government should refuse or rest on inference.''

                In 1789, the First United States Congress drafted the 
                first 10 amendments to the Constitution and later sent 
                them to the States to ratify. In doing so, the States 
                forever secured a series of freedoms that no tyrant 
                could ever infringe--including the rights to speak and 
                worship freely, to keep and bear arms, to resist 
                unlawful arrest and seizure of private property, to be 
                assured of a quick and fair trial, and to be protected 
                against cruel and unusual punishment--and affirmed that 
                the States hold all powers not granted to the Federal 
                Government.

                More than two centuries later, these foundational legal 
                principles remain the lifeblood of our Republic and 
                continue to stand at the heart of our laws, our system 
                of government, and our livelihood. Our framers 
                understood that codifying our rights in ink alone would 
                not be sufficient and that our rights depended on the 
                endurance of bedrock American principles like the 
                separation of powers, due process, checks and balances, 
                and States' rights. Above all, however, they knew that 
                our rights would forever rely on a good and moral 
                citizenry committed to the virtues that gave rise to 
                our Republic and have sustained our liberty through 
                victory and defeat, triumphs and setbacks, and times of 
                peace and war since July 4, 1776.

                Every day, my Administration is acting with strength 
                and conviction to guard these freedoms, the meaning of 
                American citizenship, and our constitutional heritage. 
                We are restoring the rule of law, fighting back against 
                left-wing lawfare, cleaning up our corrupt 
                bureaucracies and draining the swamp, and forever 
                ensuring that the American people do not answer to 
                Washington, Washington answers to the American people.

[[Page 59364]]

                As we approach 250 glorious years of American 
                independence next year, we proudly carry forward the 
                legacy forged by our Founders in the crucible of 
                revolution. We renew our commitment to always upholding 
                the common good and the dignity of the human person--
                and above all, we pledge to preserve the promise of a 
                proud, free, self-governing Republic for ourselves and 
                our posterity.

                NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the 
                United States of America, by virtue of the authority 
                vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the 
                United States, do hereby proclaim December 15, 2025, as 
                Bill of Rights Day. I call upon the people of the 
                United States, especially teachers, educators, and 
                school administrators, to mark this observance with 
                appropriate ceremonies and activities.

                IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this 
                fifteenth day of December, in the year of our Lord two 
                thousand twenty-five, and of the Independence of the 
                United States of America the two hundred and fiftieth.
                <GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT>
                
                    (Presidential Sig.)

[FR Doc. 2025-23416
Filed 12-17-25; 11:15 am]
Billing code 3395-F4-P


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Indexed from Federal Register on December 18, 2025.

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