It sounds unlikely that they would be interested in doing that.
The best candidates for the position of moderator continue to be those with their values aligned with those who are currently on strike. A moderator election happening at this time would have likely resulted in applications such as these:
I am E_net4, and I will join the ongoing moderator strike if elected.
[continues with moderator's answers to questions and other key points]
So, things would stay roughly the same in practice. And this would still be the best case scenario.
The other scenarios that I can think of, in ascending order of gravity:
- If the company itself intervened and invalidated the submissions of users who announce that they will go on strike afterwards, we would be at risk of having to pick lower quality candidates, with all that it entails.
- Rather than elections, management would continue to gather more staff to moderate. In this case then, they would regret having laid off so many people recently.
- Rather than elections, or even allocating staff to become community moderators, in their desperation for people to moderate (and I know I am giving them a dangerous idea, so I'm leaving this preamble right now because, dear Lord, don't you all even dare consider doing this
I am dead serious
)
... they would appoint or extend site-wide moderator privileges to more users based on subpar criteria, such as being recognized members in a Collective.
But at this point it's safe to say that coming to an agreement with the company might still be a path of less friction. That, or we'll definitely be in a position to say that it's no longer worth it.