Background
Recently a SO user graciously provided his opinions and tips on how EF can improve performance as a reviewer. As part of his participation in encouraging EF to improve, SO user used his powers to suspend EF from conducting reviews.
The stated rationale for implementing the suspension: "You appear to be blindly accepting every edit you see".
This rationale is factually incorrect (and the SO user was gracious enough to admit this mistake after being informed of it) nevertheless, the review history still reflects a (misleadingly) high accept/reject ratio and it is easy to see how a reasonable person could make such a mistake after casual review of the published review history.
Problem
It is possible for a reviewer to use "skip" instead of "reject" as a means of bypassing questionable content that does not meet the quality threshold for acceptance. Nevertheless, this is not reflected in the review history, and that can give the (false) impression that the reviewer is not paying attention and "blindly accepting every edit".
Proposed Solution
Include "skipped" reviews in the published review history, along with "rejected" and "accepted" reviews.
Rationale
Including "skipped" reviews in the published review history will give a more accurate reflection of the accept/reject ratio that might otherwise look high upon superficial inspection of the review history.