Update:
It appears Jeremy withdrew from the election.
The primary duties of Stack Exchange moderators are:
So in summary, if you are a community moderator on a Stack Exchange site, here’s what to expect:
As a moderator, your actions now represent the community, so you will be held to a higher standard of behavior. You are an ambassador of trust, with the same sorts of rights that the official development team and community coordinators have.
Your goal is to guide the community with gentle — but firm — intervention. Respect your fellow community members at all times; demonstrate fairness and impartiality in your actions.
Whenever possible, try to leave frequent comments on posts where you’ve taken (or considered taking) a moderator action, explaining the reasoning. This is important so that community members can learn the norms of the community and the moderation policies.
Keep the site reasonably on topic by closing, migrating, or removing blatantly off-topic questions.
Regularly check for flagged posts, and decide if further action is warranted.
In the case of serious disputes, communicate directly with users via email to help mediate and resolve those disputes.
And specifically for Stack Overflow:
I believe we regrettably must have a new, specific policy for community moderators on Stack Overflow, due to its size and scale: I propose that on Stack Overflow, all elected community moderators must close a 'reasonable' number of flags while they are on the site. If they do not, they cannot continue to hold the position of Stack Overflow community moderator.
I have absolutely no issue with Jeremy's "undelete crusade", however it can't be his primary role. If elected, the requirements are pretty well documented, and "undelete all the things" is not one of the primary responsibilities of a moderator. I feel there's a populist angle in Jeremy's nomination, and that's perfectly fine, Jeremy is not currently a moderator, we can't expect him to be fully aware of the role's responsibilities, and all of us who went through the process can tell you that we did so without having a very clear idea of what comes next and we all had a more or less populist touch in our stubs. It's an election after all.
(All) that said, Jeremy's promise might conflict with:
Keep the site reasonably on topic by closing, migrating, or removing blatantly off-topic questions.
I don't know, I have no idea which questions he has in mind. But I wouldn't worry much, if it's a problem, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it. From what I've seen from Jeremy so far I'd say that he fully realizes that if elected the wider community should come first, and not the small (?) subset of that had issues with deleting off topic questions. And I'm hoping he's talking about questions that were deleted by moderators, reversing the community's will would be a far more troubling issue.