9 Aug 14:03
Re: Amendment to: reduce the length of DPL election process
Lars Wirzenius <liw <at> liw.iki.fi>
2007-08-09 12:03:50 GMT
2007-08-09 12:03:50 GMT
On to, 2007-08-09 at 10:25 +0100, MJ Ray wrote: > Lars Wirzenius <liw <at> liw.iki.fi> wrote: > > I, as a voter, would also like to have ample time for discussion > about > > various topics after the IRC debate. [...] a week for discussion > > really does sound to me like too little time. > > Note that there could still be up to three weeks for discussion after > the IRC debate but before voting closes. Or possibly only two weeks, if aj's proposal to shorten it goes through, as well. And that's still assuming our IRC debate happens right at the beginning of the one week campaining period, when people still haven't come up with good questions to candidates, or issues and themes to discuss. To me, that is a bad way of dealing with an important discussion. Our voting period is long to deal with the fact that we are an international organization of people with wildly varying demands on our time. Otherwise, we could make the voting period be only one day, but that would exclude people on vacation, work trips, ill, or otherwise unable to attend to Debian things during that day. That would exclude too many people, or require us to set up an absentee ballot system, and a long voting period is so much simpler. I think shortening the voting period to two weeks won't exclude very many people. If it does, we should hopefully hear about them soon, before we vote on aj's amendment, in which case I expect we'll be able to vote for the shortening of the nomination period separately. Replacing part of the campaining period with the voting period is again bad for people who can't follow Debian full time. aj's proposal shortens the time people have to discuss things with candidates from six weeks to five; you would shorten it to three. To me, that is too short. I am also uncomfortable with the assumption that the vigorous discussion we often have during the campainig period would continue throughout the voting period. While I don't endorse a full ban on discussion during the voting period, unless we shorten the voting period to one or two days, courtesy if nothing else has kept the voting period mostly free of discussion during the past elections. If the voluminous discussion continues through the voting period, that effectively does reduce the useful voting period to just a day or two. Otherwise you can't vote early without missing the discussion, and voting while ignoring most of the discussion is a bad idea, I think. -- -- Communication via acronyms is rfs.
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