I am copying some parts of my question on MSE, mostly quoting Cody Gray, to preserve that post which is now deleted here. There is some duplicate info between my question and answer in favor of coherence.
What has happened:
After some discussion, the decision of removing those comments was reversed and comments were restored. But then the post itself was deleted by a CM. I am not against removing that post since it no longer serves any purpose as the nominee decided to leave the network. But removing the other thread which was talking about moderation of the post and deleting comments concerns me.
My suggestions:
I suggest posting another thread documenting the general aspects of the incident if moderator team thinks that there is more harm than good in keeping the thread. But the trace of all those actions should not be removed altogether so it can be used as a reference later.
In general, I also think it is not a bad idea for moderators to post a comment explaining what has been removed (a summary of the matter) and instructing users on what to do, e.g. saying that this topic should not be discussed anymore for reasons A & B. This is not required in so many cases, but if there is an ongoing discussion about the matter, I think that would help a lot. However, deleting comments should be the last resort when an election is involved.
I mainly agree with Cody Gray's points about what should be done when moderating election-related content (on the deleted thread). I am quoting parts of their answer here:
I deferred answering this Meta question or doing anything about it
until after I could discuss it privately with the moderator who made
the original decision. After doing so, it seems we are not going to
see eye-to-eye on this issue. I am not going to overrule that
moderator's decision (if only for practical reasons, because it simply
doesn't make sense to have a moderator deletion-undeletion war), but I
cannot in good conscience just stay quiet about this.
There are different opinions among moderators about some actions. Of course there is nothing wrong with that in general. Usually, those differences should be discussed within mod rooms and a decision can be reached. But election-related content has a higher stake, so, there should be a higher standard as well. I think community's opinion should be considered in moderating election-related content. It doesn't mean that everything should be shared with the community but some more transparency is needed. For instance, moderator who has deleted the comments has not posted a comment saying that they were removed and explaining why, as if there was never a discussion on that topic. That can arise to be considered censorship when an election is in place.
deleting comments critical of a candidate during an election is
extremely dangerous and should be avoided at nearly all costs because
of the danger of appearance of bias towards/against a particular
candidate.
Again, I surely believe that CoC should be applied always and any insult, bigotry, or false information should not be tolerated. But during an election it should be applied with a greater care. Sometimes I, myself, may flag a comment which can cause some heat, but if it is an election, I would not make that decision as easily as other times.
The community needs to be able to ask questions, many of them
difficult, about their candidates. This is key to a legitimate
democratic election, and it is absolutely necessary on Stack Overflow,
where an extremely high level of trust is placed by the community in
their moderators. Moderator candidates need to be able to withstand
being asked and be willing to answer difficult questions to the
community's satisfaction. That entire process is subverted if such
comments are deleted. Asking questions is not "harassment"—it's the
process.
My main concern here is about transparency. Again, Cody phrased it perfectly:
There does have to be a higher standard for moderators when moderating
election-related content, in order to preserve trust on such a
sensitive issue where there is almost no transparency. Stuff that
would normally be inappropriate in a comment (like questioning a
person's behavior) has to become permissible during an election,
because that's the whole point of an election.
Adding Cody's "full" answer with some redaction (as they were directly related to the incident):
[REDACTED]
{REDACTED}. But even if there wasn't bias involved in the decision,
deleting comments critical of a candidate during an election is extremely dangerous and should be avoided at nearly all costs because
of the danger of appearance of bias towards/against a particular
candidate.
Even if there was no impropriety whatsoever, the handling of this
situation creates the illusion of impropriety, which is highly
problematic in my eyes.
The community needs to be able to ask questions, many of them
difficult, about their candidates. This is key to a legitimate
democratic election, and it is absolutely necessary on Stack Overflow,
where an extremely high level of trust is placed by the community in
their moderators. Moderator candidates need to be able to withstand
being asked and be willing to answer difficult questions to the
community's satisfaction. That entire process is subverted if such
comments are deleted. Asking questions is not "harassment"—it's the
process.
I have, on a couple of occasions, deleted comments underneath
nomination posts that say little more than, "I will vote for you!" or
"Good luck!", because these provide no real useful information. On the
contrary, comments that level a specific criticism are useful,
regardless of one's personal feelings about the candidate and/or about
that criticism. If nothing else, others may have the same question,
and it's better to give the candidate a chance to answer those
allegations once, rather than have the conversation over and over.
More drama and mistrust is the last thing that Stack Overflow needs.
Putting aside whether or not it is justifiable or consistent with
one's prior words/actions, (REDACTED) is a massive violation of trust,
just as it would be to change anything you publicly stand for. So is
supporting the removal of comments that are critical of you. Worse
than all of that is posting an answer that accuses other users
(REDACTED) and other serious allegations without any
legitimate proffer of evidence. {REDACTED}.
[REDACTED]
it has been disputed, and then reversed. Why the trace of that should be removed?
Yes, I found that concerning too but I guessed that thread might have been removed to avoid further flame wars and further arguments.