I don't think this is worthwhile, for a couple reasons.
First, and less important/mostly a matter of opinion and conciseness, I don't see what purpose this actually serves. By matter of fact, the edit was rejected. It was automatically rejected by the system. So, I still find "rejected" to be a fitting category for these edits.
More importantly, good edits also get manually rejected and bad edits also get manually approved.
Pulling these stats out doesn't make them any more meaningful. I can't say how common good edits being rejected is, but I wouldn't be surprised to hear that it was incredibly common for bad edits to be approved.
Basically, there's really no good reason to separate these out when the data isn't completely trustworthy anyway. I've had edits that I made that I thought, later, really should've been rejected. They were unanimously approved. Whenever I make an edit, I actually watch to see if anyone I am sure understands the queue approves the edit. If I see a name, or stats, of anyone that seems to actually know how the queue works, and they approved the edit, then I feel like it must've been a semi-decent edit.
The editor stats are basically meaningless. I more support removing them from the edit page completely, as was suggested in the comments, than I do putting dev time to make an inaccurate and untrustworthy stat no less inaccurate or untrustworthy. If devs put any time or effort into this, just remove it.
Even if the stats were 100% accurate, including this feature request, what purpose would they serve? A good editor can make a bad edit, and a bad editor can make a good edit, so they shouldn't even be taken into account (not that they can atm) for the purposes of deciding how likely the edit is to be good. There's no reason to display this at all.