Thank you everyone for taking the time to vote on the elections, for
engaging with the tools that have been created to facilitate the voting,
and for taking the time to provide the feedback. Running these elections
with 70 candidates is a pilot and it is a great opportunity to learn
together and with your support and input. We are gathering the lessons
learned, so there can be improvements for the next time.

I am responding to some of the points made in the thread:

   - The *user interface* and, as a result, the user experience for voting
   on the SecurePoll for 70 candidates with a Single Transferable Voting
   method is indeed sub-optimal. Unfortunately, we could not figure out how to
   make it more user friendly in a short time once it became clear that there
   would be 70 candidates. It would need essential changes on how the voting
   would happen. There are some suggestions for improvements in this thread
   (no dropbox, but clickable or drag & drop candidate chips; choosing a
   different voting method or creating 7-member districts). It would be great
   to receive further perspectives on this!


   - Thank you, Lodewijk, for sharing *practical guidance* on how to make
   the most of the current user interface. Typing the first letter of the
   candidate name to find the right one in the dropdown box with 70 names is
   probably the best way to do it. A huge thank you to everyone who is taking
   the time to cast their vote!


   - Ensuring the supporting materials to help people to make informed
   decisions has been a complex matter. The candidate statements
   
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Movement_Charter/Drafting_Committee/Candidates#Candidates>
   add up to 55 pages of text, which is difficult to navigate. It seemed like
   a *compass tool* could be of help here, but it comes with its own
   complications:
      - There was a 10-day window to submit the statements and a 5-day
      upvoting period. We did our best to communicate it widely on
mailing lists
      (e.g. here
      
<https://lists.wikimedia.org/hyperkitty/list/[email protected]/message/7HVBI6M55MNVBKHNEDBEIUPSWFGJIBIE/>
      and here
      
<https://lists.wikimedia.org/hyperkitty/list/[email protected]/thread/FAJ57JAR3VP75V23OKX6MEBYUHWIAYUY/>)
      as well as social media groups, yet as there is so.much going on, not
      everyone noticed it in the timely manner.
      - We are no longer collecting or upvoting statements. We hope that 19
      that were selected are at least to some extent helpful in informing the
      voting. We are happy to receive the feedback regarding the statement
      collection and upvoting, so it would be possible to improve the
process in
      the future.
      - Election compass has its own user interface and experience
      challenges. We have opted for all the candidates being selected
as default
      for comparison, as it provides a good comparison across the pool - this
      helps to have a good overview of the positions of all the candidates.
      However, this makes navigating their rationale statements more difficult,
      as it involves a lot of scrolling. Also, if one is interested in
comparing
      2 candidates, there is a lot of deselecting that needs to
happen. It seemed
      that selecting candidates manually would bring more personal
bias into use
      of the tool, so we have chosen the select all approach as
default. Overall,
      it is the number of candidates that is creating the bulk of the
navigation
      and comparison issues and we are open to feedback on how to
improve this in
      the future.
      - The length of the statements made by the candidates in the compass
      tool was capped to prevent us from creating another wall of
text. While it
      helps to better understand the position of the candidate, it
would create a
      further barrier for voter engagement, if the expression is not clear and
      concise. I believe that the word limits will be an essential part of the
      future elections and candidate statements, because it reduces the access
      barrier for voters and also facilitates translations to a wider range of
      languages, which makes the information even more accessible. What can be
      discussed is the exact limit size and also what information is the most
      helpful to collect from candidates.
      - The tool that we used is Open Election Compass
      <https://open-election-compass.com/>. We did not do a full code
      review for this, but we did not experience any anomalies in
weighing of the
      votes during testing. If there are people who are interested in doing the
      code review, here is the link to the tool in GitHub
      <https://github.com/open-election-compass/client>.
   - We are truly grateful to the community members who have stepped in and
   tried to make the information regarding the candidates more easily
   digestible. This goes a long way in supporting informed voting in this
   process! Thank you Dušan Kreheľ and Andrew Lih for your proactive and
   constructive approach!

I apologize for the length of the response - I have tried to break it up so
the single points are more clear. I am available to respond to any further
questions and specifications, as well as happy to receive any further
feedback.

Wishing everyone a great week ahead!
Kaarel

On Mon, Oct 18, 2021 at 10:44 AM Mario Gómez <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On Mon, Oct 18, 2021 at 3:57 AM effe iets anders <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> This is a horribly problematic election. Not only does it take hours to
>> go through the candidates if you actually want to rank them, but you would
>> also need to be willing to spend about a lot of time to enter them into the
>> broken voting interface (which works great for up to 5 candidates - not for
>> 70).
>>
>
> I filled about 14 candidates and it was not extremely bad, but for anyone
> looking to rank more candidates, I guess it might have been daunting. I
> agree that the dropdowns are a very inconvenient UI for this kind of
> votation. I can imagine something more efficient like having chips for
> every candidate (no dropdown), and then sequentially click on them to add
> them to the ballot in order, then maybe supporting drag and drop to
> re-order. Changing the order of candidates once the ballot is prepared is
> particularly cumbersome.
>
> Best,
>
> Mario
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-- 

Kaarel Vaidla (he/him)

Movement Strategy <https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Strategy/2030>

Wikimedia Foundation <https://wikimediafoundation.org/>
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