August 23, 2023
The Honorable Joseph R. Biden
President of the United States
The White House
RE: Advancing Ambitious New Commitments on Open Government to Defend Democracy
Dear President Biden,
In December 2021, you urged governments at the Open Government Summit to “stand with those in civil society and courageous citizens around the world who are demanding transparency of their governments.” We write today to urge you, Vice President Kamala Harris, and every member of your Cabinet to stand with our coalition of open government advocates and commit to bold, ambitious actions on open government at the 2023 Open Government Partnership Summit.
Your administration’s demonstrated commitments to transparency — including new FOIA guidelines, restoring regular press briefings, declassifying the JFK files, and disclosing COVID data, tax returns, and intelligence about Russian actions — have all been welcome actions.
They remain insufficient to this historic moment, when the widespread erosion of trust in government has burdened hearts and poisoned minds across our body politic. The American people remain deeply divided, disillusioned, and distrustful after years of a historic pandemic and decades of official deception about war.
Since the beginning of your administration, members of our coalition have sent letters to this White House. Given the urgency of strengthening transparency and accountability in the United States to combat the rise in authoritarianism at home and abroad, we are troubled the recommendations we have made have not been acted upon.
As you know, after the Open Government Partnership was launched in 2011 during the Obama-Biden administration, U.S. civil society organizations have repeatedly made recommendations and expressed our concerns when they were not included in action plans nor executive actions. We met quarterly with the U.S. Open Government Working Group, when it existed. We participated in years of workshops and consultations related to the Open Government Directive and U.S. commitments to the Open Government Partnership. We attended public meetings in 2021 and 2022 at which White House officials promised us that our priorities would be represented in your administration’s actions.
Unfortunately, we have not seen follow-through during your administration, from delays on classification reform to a missing police misconduct database to an ongoing lack of public engagement. As documented by the OGP IRM, your administration did not co-create new commitments with us, choosing instead to issue a new plan constituted of existing priorities, programs, and policies. This has led us to have real concerns about the limits of your commitment to government transparency and accountability. We believe the lack of investment in open government has been a historic mistake.
A newly published results report for the United States from the Open Government Partnership’s Independent Review Mechanism is an indictment of the Trump’s administration’s failures to co-create ambitious commitments with the American people and then deliver on them in the open.
The researchers found that “civil society had no control over which commitments were eventually included in the NAP4 and no say in the decision to exclude others. The predictable result of this process was a NAP that mostly reflected government priorities and contained commitments that were part of ongoing or planned initiatives that were going to happen regardless.”
We assess that some of the same flaws persisted in your administration’s co-creation process in 2022 and persist in 2023 – despite the recent creation of an Open Government Secretariat in the General Services Administration to institutionalize open government across federal agencies.
There are also bright spots in the report that reflect a positive
change. The IRM hailed your administration’s actions to “Broaden Public
Access to Federally Funded Research Findings and Data” after you took
office, which have resulted in more public knowledge being available to
the American people.
The independent assessment notes how an open
government approach to improving public health led to better outcomes
for collaboration in the fight against Lyme disease: “holding open
events and sharing recordings and full transcripts—and consultations
followed by the provision of feedback helped overcome lack of trust in
government and science.”
If the Summit for Democracy and Open Government Partnership are worthy of national and international attention, then the U.S. government needs to demonstrate progress achieved through these initiatives, co-create ambitious new commitments on good governance, and then invest more resources in the human capacity required to deliver on them.
Building upon our coalition’s open government 2021 agenda that endures in the Blueprint for Accountability, we propose the following initiatives:
Please combine these new commitments with those you made for the Summit for Democracy, and announce them at the Open Government Partnership Summit in September. Doing so would reflect the leadership position the United States is seeking to reclaim, instead of undermining the partnership through openwashing.
As we face the headwinds of authoritarianism in the 21st century and adapt, improvise, and overcome the many challenges ahead, we want to express our gratitude for your service and leadership to date.
Consistent, honest leadership over time that combines truth with accountability is critical for building back broken public trust in any government of the people after years of corruption and lies. Your administration’s actions in the spring of 2022 showed how disclosure and exposure could defuse lies of a nation intent on making war, building domestic and international support for a coalition to respond.
Transparency and accountability are the key pillar in any strategy to defeat autocracy and combat corruption. We urge you, the Vice President, and all members of your administration should double down on leading the free world by the power of example.
Please show the American people how our government can execute through action, not words. Deliver on fundamental reforms that will defend our democracy from foreign and domestic threats to the Constitution, from protecting voting rights to ensuring every person has access to the information necessary for self-governance.
We hope the White House will invest far more capacity now, building on the foundations laid by generations of Americans in the past to erect an enduring architecture of open governance to strengthen and sustain our democracy.
Please contact Alex Howard, Director of the Digital Democracy Project at al...@governing.digital, if you have any questions or concerns.
Respectfully,
The Digital Democracy Project
Public Citizen
OpenTheGovernment
Project On Government Oversight (POGO)
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)
Demand Progress Education Fund
National Security Archive
Transparency International U.S.
Public.Resource.org
Freedom of the Press Foundation
Cc:
The Honorable Kamala Harris, Vice President of the United States
Jeff Zients, Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff
Bruce Reed, Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff
Neera Tanden, Assistant to the President and Domestic Policy Advisor, Domestic Policy Council
Arati Prabhakar, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Shalanda Young, Director of the White House Office of Management and Budget