Okay.
I do think that a great amount should be attributed to the President's commitment to openness. It started with the inaugural address and was completed, as I mentioned, on the first day of office when he not only gave those principles of transparency, participation, and collaboration but issued the freedom of information policy change and another one on presidential records. It was quite a full day focused on transparency.
I agree that had we not had that, the picture would have been far different today; there is no question. The real issue that maybe you should ask is what happens when this administration leaves. Is the barn door now open and you can't close it? Could another administration come in with a different set of policies, more secrecy-oriented or centralized?
This is where I think our Congress has to jump in and think about whether or not codification of some of the policies that the Obama administration has been going through is merited. I think many of us outside of government need to also start to wrestle with what has worked and what has not, to share with our Congress our views around what to codify.