As a consequence, government too often moves from active to reactive β from thinking of new ideas to pandering to the latest popular trend. Public opinion, says Nadhim Zahawi, a Tory MP and founder of the polling firm YouGov, βused to be like a fine Scotch whisky: sipped and savoured occasionallyβ. Outside election season, Margaret Thatcher only received monthly updates on what voters thought, if that. Now, governments swig from that bottle every day.
You could argue that this helps them respond instantly to votersβ concerns. Yet all too often it leads to a focus on presentation over policy, and a willingness to back down in the face of noisy opposition (which itself is easier to put together in a more connected and less hierarchical age). As Zahawi says, βpolls can only tell you how you should communicate what you want to do. They canβt tell you what you should do. Every policy creates a minority of losers, yet always the losers who are best organised and most vocal, particularly in an online arena.β
Excerpt from: The Great Acceleration: How the World is Getting Faster, Faster by Robert Colvile