When it comes to valuing openness and transparency in their government, the public is far ahead of most politicians as a new survey conducted by OMB Watch makes clear. The public is "clamoring" for a change in priorities. Last week, OMB Watch released the report [PDF] on the survey where they had asked the general public for their input on the top open government questions for candidates for federal offices. "Responses show that, more than anywhere else, Americans want greater transparency in the Executive Branch, particularly the White House," OMB Watch writes.
OMB Watch, a Sunlight Foundation grantee, developed 12 questions on various government transparency issues. Then they invited other groups and individual citizens to comment. Over 2,000 people participated. Based on that input, OMB Watch is asking voter groups, media outlets, and the general public to ask the presidential candidates five questions on these topics:
Colleague Sean Moulton, OMB Watch's director of federal information, wrote that these questions give citizens the tools to gauge where the candidates fall on the openness-secrecy spectrum.