Something the "kick the bums out" argument sorely misses is sites gradually need more moderators. This is why we add rather than replace mods. This isn't the US where we need one president, and we keep up with the changes as we go. This is more like a big company, and we need more directors/managers/whatever as we go to keep things going. Elections are held because there is more work to do, not because we don't like or trust these guys anymore.
But wait! We'll just elect more new mods each time, who cares if some get voted out?
Training moderators is hard work. Learning to be a moderator is hard work. There's lots of buttons you need to learn when to press and where to find them, what they do. You need to learn the social aspects. You need to learn how to work with your follow mods on your site. You need to learn how to work with other mods on other sites for migrations. You need to learn how to work with users and their complaints/requests/issues. You need to work with Stack Exchange employees and learn the general SE way of applying certain sensitive issues like suspending users. It's a damn lot of work.
In addition to all the added effort for everyone involved, you're also throwing out the very people who already know what they're doing. You're axing your senior developer to bring on an intern, shooting yourself in the foot so you can staple on a hoof, adding awkward metaphors on instead of making sense!
See also If the moderator workload is so high, then why are there only 3 new moderator positions available? if a system were put into place where a growing number of contested spots is available each time, we could quite easily end up in this situation where a hard to manage number of new mods come into play at once.
Finally, this whole thing pits new candidates against old candidates. Suddenly old mods don't want to speak up for the new crop because these jack$##es are after my job! Right now, old mods are a huge part of the election/new mod training process. Turning this into a conflict between old and new mod poisons that relationship in nasty ways. Suddenly letting the community know that Jim Bob would be a good mod could be the final knife in your back that removes your modship.
So no. Mods shouldn't be forced to proceedurally defend their position. If they're doing a good job who the hell cares how long they've been there? If they're not doing a good job...well, who the hell cares how long they've been there, still? An actively harmful new mod shouldn't really get all that much more slack than a mod of 5 years who's actively harmful.