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What I wonder about for XSLT 2.0 / XPath 2.0 is to take the current specs back to the drawing board, in a sense similar to  
what  XSLT 1.0 did relative to DSSSL, and produce a non-typed XML Query/Transformation language.  
 
Try telling someone who has rowed the Atlantic and is within sight of land, that you think they could finish faster if they started again and headed for a different destination. You would get roughly the same reaction.
 
 > What are the strongest arguments in favour of strong typing in XSLT 2.0? Who is pushing those arguments?

The arguments have been frequently rehearsed. For people who are using XML Schema, it seems very natural indeed that the stylesheet should take advantage of the type information that is thereby available. For example, if you have 23 elements with the same type, being able to match on the type is a real convenience. And there are many people who ARE using XML Schema.
 
Don't ever imagine that everyone on the XQuery group wants strong typing and everyone on the XSL group doesn't. That's a complete fallacy. Both groups feel that they are now close to achieving the goals that they set out to achieve.
 
Michael Kay

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