I do agree, and I do think legally biding election could be a better way. 
Although,

1) Membership is not required to vote in WMF’s election. It is a requirement 
for Wiki Project Med’s election. Editors may want to vote while keeping their 
presence anonymous.
2) WMF and most non-profits are never structured to be a full direct democracy 
anyway, that may be ethically required for government elections. However, WMF 
is not a government even though those on Wikimedia projects may feel that way. 
Still, WMF is optional, not mandatory. It can set up rules as long as it helps 
promotes its mission.
3) WMF likely have paid a large sum to their legal counsels who suggested this 
structure as the best approach. Non-profit legislation is highly 
location-dependent. It also might just be how non-profit in California 
structure their election.

I’m leaning towards trusting the foundation on this matter without further 
investigation into the legal complexity of it. At least, until it reject one of 
the community elected trustees. I feel further effort would be expensive and 
likely result in no practical change...

Best,
Leo
On Sep 12, 2021, 9:15 PM +0800, Wikimedia Mailing List 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>, wrote:
>
> Wiki
> Project Med Foundation
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