Should politicians be required to publish a “to-do list” with deadlines when they take office?
Why resist verification?
In most jobs, leaders have clear goals, timelines, and performance reviews. But when a Minister gets elected, there’s usually no structured accountability beyond elections.
What if, when taking office, they had to publish a public checklist of key issues they’ll work on with timelines and measurable targets and their progress was tracked openly during their term?
Not to punish, but to increase transparency and results-based governance.
Do you think this would improve accountability, or would it oversimplify how politics actually works?
Why resist verification?
In most jobs, leaders have clear goals, timelines, and performance reviews. But when a Minister gets elected, there’s usually no structured accountability beyond elections.
What if, when taking office, they had to publish a public checklist of key issues they’ll work on with timelines and measurable targets and their progress was tracked openly during their term?
Not to punish, but to increase transparency and results-based governance.
Do you think this would improve accountability, or would it oversimplify how politics actually works?
Should politicians be required to publish a “to-do list” with deadlines when they take office?
Why resist verification?
In most jobs, leaders have clear goals, timelines, and performance reviews. But when a Minister gets elected, there’s usually no structured accountability beyond elections.
What if, when taking office, they had to publish a public checklist of key issues they’ll work on with timelines and measurable targets and their progress was tracked openly during their term?
Not to punish, but to increase transparency and results-based governance.
Do you think this would improve accountability, or would it oversimplify how politics actually works?
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