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Who can vote: not what the ACE suffrage requirements are - see Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Election/Rules
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Administrator elections use the [[Wikipedia:ACE|Arbitration Committee Election]] suffrage requirements. To vote, an editor must meet the following criteria:
Administrator elections use the [[Wikipedia:ACE|Arbitration Committee Election]] suffrage requirements. To vote, an editor must meet the following criteria:


* registered over 1 month before election
* registered over 2 months before election
* have 150 edits by election
* have 150 mainspace edits by 1 month before election
* have 10 edits in the year running up to election
* have 10 live edits in the year running up to 1 month before election
* not be sitewide blocked during the election
* not be sitewide blocked during the election
* not be vanished
* not be vanished

Revision as of 09:53, 17 April 2024

Administrator elections are an alternative process by which interested editors can become administrators on the English Wikipedia.

A trial of administrator elections will run side-by-side with the Requests for Adminship process. Neither process affects the other in any way, and you can choose to follow either process to be an administrator candidate. The requests for adminship process grants administrative privileges if a consensus is found as a result of a public discussion of support, oppose, and neutral statements and rationales from users. The administrator election process grants administrative privileges based on a secret ballot vote. See "Comparison with the Requests for Adminship process" for more details.

Rationale

Administrator elections are a private vote, using the SecurePoll software. A list of voters is available, but their votes are kept secret. The intent is to reduce the amount of contentious discussion amongst voters, thus making the process less antagonistic and increasing the number of candidates willing to volunteer to be administrators.

English Wikipedia administrator promotion rates have been steadily declining since the golden age of administrator promotions around 2005–2008, where as many as 408 admins were being promoted per year. Modern promotion rates are closer to 12 per year.

Procedure

Election dates will be published ahead of time. Once the cycle begins, it will be publicised through watchlist notices. The overall process lasts 10 days, divided into two periods. The process is managed by the bureaucrats, initially in concert with the WMF to set up the SecurePoll software. Candidates sign up by a certain date, then Period 1 starts for discussions and questions.

Period 1: discussion and questions

This period lasts 3 days. During this time, the community can ask questions and raise issues, as well as positive feedback. Candidates are encouraged to participate in the discussion period, answering questions and responding to feedback. During this time, commenters must not indicate their support or opposition.

Period 2: voting

Once the discussion period is complete, a secret ballot vote occurs for 7 days, using SecurePoll. During this period, discussion is closed. Candidates may be asked direct questions on their user talk pages, but they are not expected to watch their discussion page, nor the election page for the full period, to allow them a respite from community vetting.

Who can vote

Administrator elections use the Arbitration Committee Election suffrage requirements. To vote, an editor must meet the following criteria:

  • registered over 2 months before election
  • have 150 mainspace edits by 1 month before election
  • have 10 live edits in the year running up to 1 month before election
  • not be sitewide blocked during the election
  • not be vanished
  • not be a bot

Tallying

At the end of Period 2, votes are scrutinised and tallied, results are announced, and new admins are granted administrative privileges. The pass rate is 70% or greater. The vote tally is calculated by Support / (Support + Oppose) for each candidate.

Election dates

Administrator elections are approved for one election cycle as a trial run, then will need to be renewed with an RFC. This trial run is likely to take place sometime in 2024.

Are RFCs required before the trial?

No. The result of the corresponding request for comment discussion is The community supports trying this proposal for 1 election, after which it will be reviewed in Phase II. While there are concerns regarding the implementation details of this proposal, given this is a trial run, there is sufficient support to run the election as written.

Accordingly, one election will be held, with implementation details (such as scrutineering) worked out based on discussions on this page's talk page. After the trial, request for comment discussions will be held to discuss how to proceed, thus allowing the community to alter the process if desired, or choose not to continue.

Comparison with the Requests for Adminship process

Requests for adminship Administrator elections
Duration 7 days (2 days discussion-only)[1] 10 days (3 days discussion-only)
Scheduled No Yes
Voting Public Secret (using SecurePoll)
Selection method Consensus Vote
Pass threshold 65-75%[2] 70%
Suffrage requirement Extended confirmed account See § Who can vote
  1. ^ As per consensus at Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/2024 review/Phase I § Proposal 3b: Make the first two days discussion-only (trial), for a trial period, there is 2-day discussion-only period.
  2. ^ As RfA is a consensus-based process, there is not exact threshold for success, but in practice a candidate with below 65% support is almost always unsuccessful, and above 75% almost always successful. Candidates with between 65 and 75% support are typically subject to a bureaucrat discussion about the consensus for their request, and outcomes vary on a case-to-case basis.

See also

References