We do need more people voting, that's how the democratic process works and ideally, we would see the turnout around 60%, but: moderator elections are not comparable to state-wide elections, no issues concerning citizen wellbeing are decided here. This 4.29% were cast by those who consider themselves invested enough in the future of the website, and in that context, nearly 5% is a good result.
You also need to take into account the recent divide between SE Inc and the community, which contributed to the election being viewed as a pointless or even harmful endeavor by many. Just take a look at some of the phenomena that accompanied the election:
- 5 out of 10 questions in the latest questionnaire were about the recent turmoil
- one question stated "why do you still want to run?" in plain text
- we had a protest vote candidate who basically ran as an "against everyone" checkbox
Additionally, every piece of data should be interpreted. Being "eligible" to vote in the context of moderator elections means only "having 150 reputation points". Out of those eligible, only 185 477 users posted anything and accessed the website in the last 6 months. Of those, only 53 918 last month, and only 26 796 were active during the last two weeks.
If we count only those who just logged in, 478 545 in 6 months, 383 059 last month, 331 807 last 2 weeks, and only 303 880 last 10 days, so about 10% of eligible users who logged in at all, voted. Given the above stats, an even higher percentage of those who are actually active, voted.
So, while having better representation during votes is desirable, we do not need to increase turnover just to increase it. What we need are:
- better onboarding process (not the one that paints SO as rainbow land to news only to have this view be shuttered the first time they ask a poorly researched, horribly formatted and asked-to-death question without an MRE)
- better experience for established users (on that note, we finally got review suspension notifications feature, which is a step in the right direction):
- better answering experience (why does one have to add
resize: both
in dev tools to be able to increase answer box width? Can we rediscuss using tables in markdown?),
- better voting experience (why does one have to spend a non-refundable point to downvote an answer?)
- better tagging experience (why do we have to bother moderators, whose job is being arbiters, not concept cartographers, each time we need to merge anything?)
and much more, which requires a significant effort on both the community and company side. Until that is done, voting turnout is one of our least significant problems.