What the heck does opposing 'Evidence-based' policy mean that you support?
Non-evidence based policy? Really?
Super-evidence-based policy? (That's some damn interesting marketing propaganda.)
I literally cannot wrap my head around what the first article wants us to base our policy on except "listen to what we say, and ignore any contrary evidence."
There are quotation marks around it for a reason. Rewrite it as "Are so-called 'Evidence-based' policies damaging policymaking?", and you'll be much closer to a proper interpretation of what he wrote, and then of course your response no longer applies.
http://www.iea.org.uk/in-the-media/press-release/%E2%80%98evidence-based%E2%80%99-policies-are-damaging-uk-policymaking
Those in favour of evidenced based policies have tended to be dismissive, arguing that this is just a case of lack of evidence, rather than a problem with evidence-based policies per se.
https://twitter.com/bengoldacre/status/370159847985381376
I'm not fully convinced though. I've started reading Taking the medicine: a short history of medicine's beautiful idea and our difficulty swallowing it by Druin Burch, and this has plenty of examples of people saying something like "Of course, up till now medicine has been totally wrong, but I've got a new way of doing it right" - and then going on to make the same old mistakes. Maybe evidence based practice is the same, just a way of convincing ourselves that we've got it right this time.
As I see it, the trouble with evidence based practice is that what counts as evidence based today doesn't meet tomorrows higher standards. This means
At the root of this is the insistence that evidence must meet some 'gold standard'. This seems to be too much the frequentist viewpoint, but in the end we have to be Bayesians, taking all evidence into account.