According to [[WP:DRV]], 50% would be enough to overturn a speedy deletion and send it back to the relevant *FD:
"If there is neither a majority to endorse the decision nor a three-quarters supermajority to overturn and apply some other result, the article is *relisted* on the relevant deletion process."
--Christopher Parham
On 3/26/2006 11:15 AM, David Alexander Russell wrote:
This occured to me recently - wouldn't it make a lot of sense to lower the threshold to 50% for a successful undeletion of speedies? I'm all for keeping the 75% threshold for stuff deleted via *fd, since *fd deletions require consensus to achieve, it makes sense to require a high standard to overturn that decision, however if an article has been speedied (ie the deletion judgment was made by one admin, rather than a discussion on *fd), and 60% of people think that it shouldn't have been, surely there is something wrong there.
Sure, I know that voting is evil, Wikipedia is not a democracy and so on, but shouldn't speedies (or, to be more precise, an individual admin's interpretation of whether a page meets the speedy deletion criteria) which are not subject to any community scrutiny be easier to overturn than *fd votes, which are?
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