It seems there’s a fair degree of attention paid to the question of trust, as in, “how much do citizens trust their elected officials?”
We’ve seen citizen trust in the federal government drop dramatically.
And surveys find that, while citizens tend to trust state government more than the federal government and their local government more than federal and state, those citizen to government trust levels tend to be low.
But has anyone ever asked how much do elected officials trust their citizens?
Trust is a two-way street. Yet, this question gets virtually no attention.
That’s why CLOSUP, the University of Michigan’s Center for Local, State and Urban Policy, decided to put that question to local government leaders in its recent Michigan Public Policy Survey.
It’s an interesting “snapshot” of the state of trust between us and the people we’ve elected to lead us.
We sat down with Tom Ivacko from CLOSUP to tell us what exactly happened when politicians were asked if they trust the people that voted for them.
Listen to the full interview above.