Nearly six in 10 say they
believe corruption has increased in the last 12 months, up from about a
third in January 2016, according to Transparency International, a global
corruption watchdog.
In the latest survey, 44 percent of
Americans say corruption is endemic in the White House, up eight
percentage points and overtaking Congress as the part of government most
frequently cited as corrupt, the survey found, AFP reported.
"Our
elected officials are failing to build back trust in Washington's
ability to serve the people and still appear to represent elite
corporate interests," Transparency's US Representative Zoe Reiter said
in a statement.
Nearly seven in 10 also believe the government is failing to fight corruption, up from half of respondents in 2016.
Trump took office on a pledge to "drain the swamp" in Washington, and rein in corporate lobbying.
But
Trump did not separate himself from his global business empire, and
critics have denounced what they say are unprecedented conflicts of
interest for the president as government policies frequently are liable
to affect his family's bottom line.
Transparency said its survey
was based on computer-assisted telephone interviews conducted with 1,005
adults between October and November and had a margin of error of 3.1
percent.
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