An opinion on polls
If elections are a "trap for bloody idiots," as Sartre once wrote,
opinion polls are the bait that leads them to the trap. The only
prediction that could be made with any assurance of accuracy
before the Czech elections was that the opinion polls would be
wrong. Yet wrong as they were, they played a big role in
producing an election outcome that kept nearly the same forces
in power. The two largest parties might have lost considerable
ground, but the votes they forfeited were absorbed by new
parties backed by many of the same business and political
interests. The public media should be held accountable for
contributing to this outcome. Whether intentionally or not, the
system of using opinion polls - with their notorious level of
inaccuracy - to eliminate certain small parties from television
and radio debates ended up favoring those parties that don't
want any real change. Thanks in no small part to the public
media, the revolution many voters were hoping for was "drowned
in the ballot boxes," as Sartre so eloquently put it.
[Czech Republic Jean-Paul ODS ČSSD surveys TOP 09 VV Věci
veřejné]
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