When reviewing edits, I was asked to approve a tag change for a post that appeared to be copy-pasted from someone's homework. The post had been down-voted into oblivion, but I was not reviewing a close vote; I was reviewing a tag change. And the tags were clearly wrong, so I approved the change.
A few minutes later when trying to review something else, I got the error
You approved: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/5263655 on a clearly spam post without taking any action against the spam. Even if it weren't spam this edit would still be too minor.
Apparently the question was later judged to be spam. But I don't understand why I was banned for approving the tag change. Even if I did fully read the original question, follow its link, and reach the conclusion that it was spam, the edit-reviewing UI does not given an option to reject the change on the grounds of the original question being spam.
Also, why was the edit considered to be too minor? Tag changes aren't big changes in terms of the numbers of characters edited, but they're important in how questions get characterized. I would expect that a tag change would never be too minor.