I don't know what the concern is. After all, the government is going to the trouble of providing pre-packaged TV "news" to help keep Americans informed.

How much more open can they be? :^)

An excerpt from the AP story carried at nytimes.com:

Americans feel strongly that good government depends on openness with the public, with seven out of 10 people concerned about government secrecy, a new poll says.

The poll, conducted by Ipsos-Public Affairs for Sunshine Week, a coalition of media organizations and other groups pressing for government access, found that more than half of Americans believe government should provide more access to its records.

Even more -- 70 percent -- are either ``somewhat concerned'' or ``very concerned'' about government secrecy. Nearly as many felt access to public records was ``crucial'' to good government.

The results come amid growing debate about openness at all levels of government in the years since the Sept. 11 attacks: Open-government advocates say the government has become more secretive at the price of a healthy democracy, while government defenders say the times demand that national security weigh a little more heavily in the balance between openness and privacy.

While I consider myself to be on the side of the angels when it comes to government openness, I'm always suspicious of polls that nicely buttress the main concerns of the sponsoring organization -- even when they're done by the good folks at Ipsos Public Affairs. :)

I would like to know what questions were asked and the order in which they were asked (not available at posting time).

Anyways, here's an Editor and Publisher story on Sunshine Week, and here's an AP website on open government.