User:9cfilorux/RFA reform

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Over the years, there has been much discussion of what is wrong with RFA and how it should be fixed. Though by an undeniable number of accounts there is need for a change of some kind, nothing has ever materialised and nothing looks to be about to do so; thus, I hope to be able to try and think up something that might be more successful. (Fat chance.)

The problem with RFA seems to be that not enough candidates pass, which is apparently due to inconsistent voting standards. Indeed, it is to a large extent 'voting' rather than '!voting': people have all sorts of ideas on what constitutes a good administrator, and some give no reason at all or simply 'per so-and-so'. I believe the solution is to make RFA more like AFD, i.e. to have a clearly defined set of standards for !votes and to enforce those standards as needed.

My thoughts on what kind of votes should be disallowed are as follows:

  1. ^ A number of these are actually pretty common.

As well, there should probably be a set of fixed, easily verifiable criteria that, if the candidate does not meet them, are grounds for a bureaucrat to speedily close the RFA as unsuccessful:

  • Has existed for x or more time and made x or more edits; this would of course be more stringent than the requirement for voters; probably 1 year and 5000 edits, at the least. Which namespaces the edits are in may also be important, as someone who mainly edits userspace is probably WP:NOTHERE.
  • Has created x or more articles (if this is found to be an important criterion). X should be a well-defined number.

In contrast to other reform proposals, mine makes no radical changes, which may prove to be an advantage. Keep in mind, however, that I have hardly participated in RFA and AFD, and that FAC may be a better model to work from (but I have literally no experience with it, so attempting to base anything on it would be an exercise in stupidity).