Wikipedia Mediation Cabal
ArticleUnited States Senate elections in Illinois, 2010
StatusClosed
Request date05:56, 6 August 2010 (UTC)
Requesting partyLinuxrocks123 (talk)
Mediator(s)bobrayner
CommentClosed, at the request of Jerzeykydd, nobody else had any objections. I'm not convinced that the underlying issue is wholly resolved, though, so feel free to ask me to reopen if dispute resumes.

Request details

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United States Senate elections in Illinois, 2010

Where is the dispute?

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There is a content disagreement about whether or not the Green party candidate should be listed in the info-box on the right of the article.

Who is involved?

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Just a list of the users involved.

What is the dispute?

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Many editors, most recently Jerzeykydd and Namiba, believe that the Green party candidate should be listed in the info-box. Many other editors, most recently me, believe that the Green party candidate is de-facto not a serious contender in the election and that is misleading to include the candidate's image in the info-box. The argument of Jerzeykydd and Rrius is that the qualification of the Green party as an "established" party under Illinois election rules -- meaning the Green party does not need to get as many signatures to run a candidate as other minor parties, but only the same number as the Democrats and Republicans -- means that the Green party is a "major" party and that the Green candidate is therefore a "major" candidate and should be listed in the info-box.

I argue that this statute is not relevant: the Green candidate is not a serious contender in the election, and only serious contenders should be listed in the info-box. Listing minor candidates in the info-box is misleading as readers of the page will believe that there really is a "three-way race" going on, like in Florida with Crist, and it is undisputed that this is not the case.

What would you like to change about this?

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I would like you to clarify what circumstances dictate which candidates should be listed in the info-box in an election such as this.

How do you think we can help?

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Hopefully, your opinion in this matter can help all parties understand when and when not a candidate should be listed prominently in the info-box.

Mediator notes

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I'd like to take on this case. bobrayner (talk) 00:24, 14 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

However, before diving into the dispute itself - where is the prior discussion? Of the four involved people mentioned above, two of them don't appear on [1]. The person who raised the case, Linuxrocks123, doesn't appear to have commented on the talkpage at all. Have people discussed this somewhere else? There doesn't seem to be any mention of the mediation request either. Are people generally aware of this and happy with mediation as a way forward?

Unfortunately, I am not yet empowered to cast down lightning bolts of Truth from the heavens; a mediator can only help involved parties to work towards a solution through their own discussion and consent. Those cannot exist if people don't even know mediation is happening. On 14 August I left a pointer to this medcab case on the article talkpage; lacking any responses I notified individual users on 18 August. If people are not interested in trying to deal with the disagreement through mediation - or if everybody has already agreed anyway - then I may close this case.

Update: Jerzeykydd emailed me a few minutes ago suggesting that this case be closed. I think that is reasonable, since we don't seem to be moving much further forward. Any objections? bobrayner (talk) 00:02, 28 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Administrative notes

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Discussion

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It's not a made up rule. Refer to:

By the way, this is the first edit of 98.253.56.154. Please do me a favor and reveal yourself. What are you trying to hide?--Jerzeykydd (talk) 22:47, 13 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

That seems to be a list of four other articles which had lively debate rather than consensus. They are not policy pages. The latter has much of the same discord, and at the bottom somebody said "This rule has been questioned because it's not mentioned on policy pages, so I'm mentioning it here", perhaps in the hope of forming a firm rule, but the only response was disagreement.
Again: Where is this 5% rule? Just saying it over and over again won't make it so. I had understood that candidates in an election are listed as candidates in the election infobox - are the disputed people candidates, or not? There is no mention of a 5% rule on Template talk:Infobox election and an example on that infobox manages to squeeze in six candidates.
The infobox does seem to have an option for "minor candidates", though. Perhaps that could be a compromise? bobrayner (talk) 23:53, 26 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]
There is no rule. Plain and simple really. There have been several discussions on various talk pages, but until the relevant wikiproject comes to a reasonable conclusion, it is really just opinion. LeAlan Jones has received widespread coverage and has polled as high as 14%. If you doubt his relevancy to the election, you are obviously mistaken.--TM 04:51, 23 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Is this mediation still live? If so, where is it taking place? Hipocrite (talk) 13:51, 7 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I too would like to know is this mediation is still live. I don't really care one way or the other, but I would like to see consistency. If a candidate is likely to affect the outcome, whether by winning or being a 'spoiler', imo they may belong in the infobox even if polling less than 5%. I would prefer to keep out the usual sort of write-ins (Lisa Murkowski an obvious exception this year) and those only supported by their mothers (who may or may not vote for them anyway). ;-) Flatterworld (talk) 17:16, 8 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I was hoping that Jerzeykydd could provide some explanation for this 5% "wikipedia rule". So far Jerzeykydd has provided links to other articles which had lively debate on such a proposed rule, rather than setting some firm precedent. So far I have not discovered any actual wikipedia policy on the subject. Unless somebody can provide a firm basis for this 5% rule, or at least a consensus for applying a 5% threshold on this article (which appears unlikely since some contributors to the article disagree with Jerzeykydd's "rule"), perhaps we should feel free to put any candidates in the candidates section of the infobox. The infobox's designers do not appear to have intended any such restriction.
I'll leave a reminder on Jerzeykydd's talkpage, just in case they forgot about this medcab case or have been too busy to contribute. bobrayner (talk) 02:49, 12 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Jerzeykydd was banned for edit-warring until November.--TM 02:52, 12 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) Yes, I came back to update my comment after discovering that; thanks :-)
Since Jerzeykydd seems to be the only person who knows about this "wikipedia rule to make sure only the major candidates are in the infobox", which is at the heart of the mediation case, I doubt we will be able to make much progress whilst they are banned from editing. bobrayner (talk) 03:03, 12 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
He is not the only one. It is widely observed at US election pages, and was extensively discussed during, among others, the 2008 presidential election. In fact, the 2010 Illinois Senate race seems to be the principal place for doubters of the convention's existence. In any event, the discussion moved back to the article talk page. I got bored of the discussion, but it probably saw consensus in favour of including the virtually unknown Labno. Someone qualified to close should check up at the article and close if the discussion is over. -Rrius (talk) 06:23, 12 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for replying!
Is this "rule" actually a matter of consensus on individual election articles? If so, perhaps lessons can be learned from discussions on other articles, but adhoc agreements on those articles may not be binding on this one; that would be a WP:OTHERSTUFF problem.
I haven't yet found any policy which overrules those who disagree with the 5% threshold.
If there is no rule dictating what to do, I would be happy to help y'all work towards consensus/compromise on this article, but that would be would be nontrivial since there seem to be several editors here who disagree with the 5% threshold. It is probably not possible to work towards consensus/compromise whilst there is claimed to be a rule that overrides dissenters but its proponents haven't yet pointed to the actual policy page.
Apart from this article, I expect the problem will reappear on other election articles on future; would you like me to raise it as a point for centralised discussion somewhere? Maybe on the election infobox's talkpage or even down at the village pump.
bobrayner (talk) 10:15, 12 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]