Most of us cannot determine when a user who posts an answer also downvotes all the other answers on the question. Even if you can see that their answer has not been downvoted whereas all others have, you cannot be certain that the author of the one answer that did not get downvoted is the person who downvoted the other answers.
Now, it would be easy for the SE devs to implement an algorithm that automatically raises a flag when it so happens that a user who has answered a question has also downvoted all the other answers. The problem though is how the moderators should interpret the flag. Most of us would agree that downvoting answers merely to make one's own answer stand out is not a valid use of voting. However, it is perfectly legitimate for someone who answers an question to downvote other answers if they find the other answers to be useless or harmful, seeing as these are reasons to downvote answers. (If such voting were not allowed it would be blocked by the site.) The problem is distinguishing cases when someone is tactically downvoting from cases when someone is just applying their quality standards. Let me give an example. Some people will, as a matter of principle, downvote any answer that references sites that they consider to be bad references. A famous example is w3schools.com. Some people hold that sending readers to that site is actively harmful. Let's suppose Alice is one such user. She runs into a question where there are 2 answers already, which both reference a bad site. So she downvotes them and adds her own answer, which explains more thoroughly than the other answers and references a site she considers more reputable. It might appear to someone who received an automatically generated flag that she engaged in strategic voting but really she was just applying the same standards she applies to all answers she runs into.
Such flag could also potentially harm vote anonymity. Currently, only some SE employees are able to see who voted on what. An automatically generated flag which would be visible only to SE employees would not harm anonymity but I'm pretty sure the flag volume would overwhelm them. If the flag is made visible to moderators (who do not happen to also be SE employees), then this harms vote anonymity because it would provide moderators with information they do not currently have.