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Wikipedia:No consensus


In any discussion on , there are two possible outcomes: consensus, for some course of action, and no consensus. However, what a "no consensus" result means differs depending on the nature of the discussion. Often, people feel that "no consensus" should mean that the current status quo prevails, which, therefore, defaults to keep. That is not always the case however. Also, just because there is "no consensus" among those participating (a local consensus), does not mean there is no "no consensus" in the broader community. Often it is the case that a closing admin will recognize that arguments for one side are much better founded in (community consensus supported) policy than for the other, and so there actually is consensus support for one particular outcome.

Discussion and debate on a proposal may continue on talk pages after a "no consensus" situation, but in the meantime, it is important that affected articles are not subjected to edit-wars despite a lack of policy or guideline direction on an issue. A status quo approach is preferable where practical and possible to promote article stability and to prevent edit warring.

It is important to note that a few vocal dissenters do not create "no consensus". [This is debated.] Please see CONSENSUS for further discussion of what constitutes consensus.

In any XfD (WP:AfD, WP:TfD, etc.), "no consensus" defaults to keep. Keeping an article preserves all options and the possibility of future discussions.

A no-consensus result at DRV means that no new action will be taken. Deleted content will not be undeleted, although a reasonable request for WP:userfication is usually granted. Undeleted content may be subsequently considered again at XfD, preferably after a few weeks or months, and preferably with the nomination referencing the previous reasons for no consensus. Repeated nominations at DRV are rarely welcomed unless new information is introduced.

At RfA, if there is no consensus to promote, then the only possibility is that there is no promotion.

In a discussion regarding a section of policy or guideline, "no consensus" means that a proposed section should not be added. If the discussion is about a section already in the policy, that section should be removed. Policy and guideline should reflect consensus. If there is no consensus as to existing policy, then it no longer reflects that and should be removed. Similarly, if there is no consensus over the status of a page (e.g. policy, guideline, essay), then the status may need to be discussed further and more people brought into the discussion.


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