Back with fresh eyes and less of a splitting headache, I think perhaps I've hit upon a better way of explaining this than I could come up with yesterday.
Basically, although they've considered it multiple times, the team still hasn't been able to decide on what to do. As such, the feature is not being planned, much less is it approved and scheduled for implementation.
Because the team can't decide what to do, they aren't doing anything. Yes, like you said, features start out "declined" by default. They can be moved up to "review", and then either demoted back to "declined" or promoted up to "approved" (and eventually "completed"), but every proposed feature starts out with a -100 point score.
As I did manage to come up with yesterday, tagging it status-planned would be very misleading, because there's no tangible plan.
Tagging it status-review probably would have been appropriate at some point, when the community managers indicated that it was actively being discussed and reviewed, but at this point, after they've talked about it and still have been unable to agree on what to do or come up with a concrete plan, I think it would be equally misleading to have it tagged as status-review. As far as I can tell, as an outsider looking in, it is no longer being actively reviewed. And if we don't keep the status-review tag reserved for things that are being actively reviewed, it loses all meaning. Everything presented here is reviewed at some level, and even features that have been declined are subject to rising from the ashes like the mythical Phoenix, quite like the litany of "make the top bar sticky" feature requests from 2009–11 that were repeatedly declined, yet suddenly…
It seems that your real complaint is this:
I just don't like how an FR like that with massive support is made status-declined without no reasoning or answer, other then at this moment we can't reach consensus
and that is a completely fair point. It would be nice if someone from the team could post an answer there, even if just to explain that they talked about it until they were blue in the feet, but were ultimately unable to shog everyone into agreement.
Still, all things considered, I think leaving the status-declined tag is appropriate. Consider the alternative, which would be to simply remove the [status-*] tag. To someone unfamiliar with the history surrounding the issue, reading the apparently strong community support (with endorsement even coming from a moderator), I think that would definitely send the wrong signal. It's not coming down the pike any time soon, and for all intents and purposes, you might as well consider it to be declined. If it rises from the grave again, to be implemented at some later date, then that's lovely, but we can simply change the tag at that time.
In other words, status-declined is the most accurate tag we currently have to represent the state of that proposal, so it's the one that should stay. We don't have a status-6-to-8-weeks or status-we-tried-but-well-we-still-dunno or status-ugh-running-a-huge-community-website-is-so-hard tag, and while one of those might be, strictly speaking, more accurate, they wouldn't really convey any more useful message.