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Recently, I paid attention to an interesting piece of news about a change in how public opinion is measured in the U.S.. Gallup has just decided to stop publishing presidential approval polls, marking the end of the longest-running political assessment in the country's history. This is not a small decision — this survey has become an indispensable tool for understanding American voter sentiment over decades.
But why stop now? The main reason is the increasing political polarization in the U.S.. Party lines have become more rigid than ever, making traditional polling methods less reliable. As voters become more divided along strict ideological lines, measuring public opinion with conventional approaches no longer accurately reflects reality.
What’s interesting here is that it reveals a bigger truth — old tools built on the spreadsheets of a different era are no longer suitable for the modern context. It’s like trying to apply retirement age calculation methods from the 1970s to today’s generation — they simply don’t work as they used to. Bloomberg also emphasizes this point, viewing Gallup’s decision as a reflection of the deep divisions currently present in American society.
This serves as a reminder that in any field — whether politics, finance, or anything else — when the environment changes too rapidly, old measurement tools need to be updated or replaced entirely. Otherwise, we will continue to see the world through an outdated lens.