“The administration might have been trying to sweep this under the rug, but I will hold them accountable to you,” Galloway said in her address. “Missourians deserve transparency.”

In May, she needled Parson's office for citing the First Amendment to close public records, and asked a Parson ally, Attorney General Eric Schmitt, to issue an opinion on the legality of such a citation. Schmitt has yet to issue one.

She also criticized a new anti-abortion law Parson signed last month, which bans the procedure at eight weeks of pregnancy.

"He wants a woman’s decisions over her health care to be criminalized," Galloway said. "It’s extreme and cruel."

Jean Evans, executive director of the Missouri Republican Party, said it was no surprise Galloway was preparing a run for governor.

"She's been attacking the governor for a while so we knew she was running," Evans said. "It's not news. I mean, it is. But it's not to us."