The election anouncement states: Our general criteria for moderators are as follows: - patient and fair - leads by example - shows respect for their fellow community members in their actions and words - open to some light but firm moderation to keep the community on track and resolve (hopefully) uncommon disputes and exceptions In my own experience with Stackoverflow (which changed over the laster years from "wow, fantastic" to "wtf") I would tend to vote for those nominees which showed patient and fair, leadership by example and showed respect. Therefore personally I would vote for those where I can see what they have downvoted (and provided a reason for, no anonymous downvotes). They voted for closing questions that were justified. More and more often I stumble accross questions which were closed for no reason. Well, reasons told: not a meaningful question, duplciate of X,.... More and more often those questions are no duplicates of others (because some important detail is different). Sometimes they are duplicates but the other question was asked years later. More and more often those questions are closed as not meaningful. They were asked in one or two sentences but perfectly and fully described the problem. [Example][1] (It is one method call in c# and if you need to cancel this task you understand the question). So: is there a way to see the behaviour of the nominees in the past in order to evalutate it? This may improve to elect moderators which make Stackoverflow great again and not a nightmare of unanswered closed questions with a bunch of unexplained anonymous downvotes. [1]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7385415/stopping-copy-file-process-in-net