> > +1 to this, with a term limit. > > Notable that the Debian TC has been discussing term limits for > months now, and since DebConf they seem to have gotten much closer > to a concrete proposal[1] in the last week or so. Could be worth > watching for ideas on how our community might attempt to implement > something similar.
That is indeed an interesting approach that the Debian folks are considering. So, just to round out this thread, the key questions are: * whether a low & declining turnout is a real problem and, if so: * could this have been driven by a weakness in the voting model, and/or the perception of representative balance in the outcomes The options that were mooted on the thread could be ranked in order of how radical they are, and how likely to have an impact: 0. *do nothing* - accept low turnout as a fact of life, or hope that natural factors such as a slowdown in contributor growth will eventually cause it to stabilize. 1. *make a minor concession to proportionality* - while keeping the focus on consensus, e.g. by adopting the proportional Condorcet variant. 2. *weaken the continuity guarantee* - by un-staggering the terms, so that all seats are contested at each election. 3. *go all out on proportionality* - by adopting a faction-oriented voting model, such as STV with simultaneous terms. 4. *ensure some minimal turn-over* - by adopting either traditional term limits, or the more nuanced approach that Jeremy referenced up-thread. If it came down to it, my money would be on #2 or #3 for the reasons stated before. With the added bonus that this would allow TC elections to be viewed more as a plebiscite on some major issue (such as the layering discussions). Cheers, Eoghan _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev