In a probably unprecedented (and definitely antidemocratic) move one of the moderator candidates of the current (2021 Fall-on-the-Northern-Hemisphere) election posted their nomination 53 seconds before the nomination phase ended.
There are three main problems here. The first is that comments can only be posted on a candidate's nomination page during the nomination phase, so this "tactical" move prevented all kinds of discussion (most importantly, scrutiny) from all the folks who bother to look at nomination pages.
The second problem is that the user didn't even bother to answer the questionnaire, which could've been addressed in inquisitive comments -- if the "tactical" move hadn't prevented leaving comments, see previous point about scrutiny.
Finally, intentionally gaming the election system is the most antidemocratic thing I can think of. It is a slap in the face for both the community, and fellow nominees who have made the effort of submitting a legitimate nomination with ample room for discussion and criticism.
So my question is this: what if the candidate (sporting a 40/40 candidate score; voting masses love that!) gets elected? How can we trust a moderator whose very first action even before being elected was gaming the very systems we have in place to try and ensure democratic elections? And can we do something to prevent such abuse of nominations in the future?