
Trump administration withdraws U.S. from global open government initiative
The General Services Administration cited the organizationโs support for โLGBTQ+ advocacy, feminism, and climate alarmismโ among its reasons the nation dropped its membership.
By Madison Alder, January 30, 2026
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The U.S. government has backed out of an organization it helped found thatโs aimed at improving how governments can better serve their citizens.
The Open Government Partnership announced Wednesday that the U.S. had formally withdrawn its membership, adding to a growing list of organizations the administration has departed.
Despite the U.S. being one of the founding nations of the organization in 2011, the General Services Administrationโs head, Edward Forst, wrote to the groupโs leadership this month to notify them of the decision.
Per a copy of that letter published by OGP, Forst said the countryโs participation in the organization โhas become at best ineffective and at worst detrimental to advancingโ principles outlined in the nationโs founding documents, though he didnโt cite specific documents.
Forst implied that the body โseeks to erode U.S. national sovereigntyโ and went on to blame its โembrace of divisive ideological agendasโ as a reason the nation dropped its membership.
โRacial identity politics, anti-police bias, LGBTQ+ advocacy, feminism, and climate alarmism have increasingly dominated OGPโs policy agenda,โ Forst wrote. โThese divisive agendas, driven by extreme ideological cliques, have destroyed the ability of OGP to credibly operate as a voice for transparency.โ
That rhetoric echoes the Trump administrationโs controversial efforts to remove diversity, equity, and inclusion, or DEI, from the federal government โ whether through the termination of grants, positions, organizations, or data points. The withdrawal also comes after the organization reported that the Trump administration had weakened the U.S. governmentโs existing progress toward open government goals.
In a December report, OGP pointed to the Trump administrationโs repeal and replacement of executive orders โrelated to equity, data transparency, and law enforcement accountabilityโ and disbanding a federal advisory committee on open government as examples of weakened progress.
The U.S. withdrawal was met with disappointment and criticism from the organizationโs leadership as well as civil society leaders, though none expressed surprise.
โAnyone who has followed developments over the last year will not be surprised by this decision of the US government,โ Aidan Eyakuze, OGPโs CEO, said in a statement included in the release.
Eyakuze commended efforts by government leaders and civil society to advance accountability goals and expressed hope the U.S. would return to the organization one day.
Daniel Schuman, executive director of the nonprofit American Governance Institute who previously led the now-disbanded Open Government Federal Advisory Committee, said the administrationโs decision is part of โa broader pattern of opacity.โ
โThe Trump administration is not only the least transparent government in American history; its policies are antithetical to democracy, of which transparency is an essential element,โ Schuman said in a written statement.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Trump administration withdraws U.S. from global open government initiative | FedScoop
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