(Not advocating for a specific outcome, just an observation.) The term "XHTML" is no longer even used in the current version of the WHATWG HTML Living Standard. It's instead just referred to as the XML syntax for the HTML DOM. Here is a section relevant to this discussion, describing the relationship between HTML, XML, and XHTML.
WHATWG HTML Living Standard: Section 1.8: HTML vs XML Syntax
This specification defines an abstract language for describing documents and applications, and some APIs for interacting with in-memory representations of resources that use this language.
The in-memory representation is known as "DOM HTML", or "the DOM" for short.
There are various concrete syntaxes that can be used to transmit resources that use this abstract language, two of which are defined in this specification.
The first such concrete syntax is the HTML syntax. This is the format suggested for most authors. If a document is transmitted with the
text/html
MIME type, then it will be processed as an HTML document by Web browsers. This specification defines the latest HTML syntax, known simply as "HTML".The second concrete syntax is XML. When a document is transmitted with an XML MIME type, such as
application/xhtml+xml
, then it is treated as an XML document by Web browsers, to be parsed by an XML processor. Authors are reminded that the processing for XML and HTML differs; in particular, even minor syntax errors will prevent a document labeled as XML from being rendered fully, whereas they would be ignored in the HTML syntax.NOTE: The XML syntax for HTML was formerly referred to as "XHTML", but this specification does not use that term (among other reasons, because no such term is used for the HTML syntaxes of MathML and SVG).
The DOM, the HTML syntax, and the XML syntax cannot all represent the same content. For example, namespaces cannot be represented using the HTML syntax, but they are supported in the DOM and in the XML syntax. Similarly, documents that use the
noscript
feature can be represented using the HTML syntax, but cannot be represented with the DOM or in the XML syntax. Comments that contain the string "-->
" can only be represented in the DOM, not in the HTML and XML syntaxes.
(It is It was still referred to as XHTML by the W3C HTML 5.2 Specification, but the W3Cthat specification is de-facto obsolete, poorly maintained, and no longer taken seriously by any browser vendors and the next version will copy the WHATWG Standard.)