A lot of suggested edits are minor, leaving the post they edit in more or less the same state as before the edit. They only add tags but forget to remove them from the title, or they indent the first code block but forget the second, they "fix grammar" but forget to capitalize "i", and so on.
I flat-out reject those as being no improvement whatsoever. I only do that in the described case, when my initial reaction to spotting such an edit was "Is that really all you could change?". By approving the edit, you'll kick the question to the top of the question list, where the remaining horror will be visible for everyone, everyone can see the minor edit that caused it and will think it's OK to do so, adding yet another minor edit suggestion to fix one of the remaining issues, ad infinitum.
Questions that need a lot of work to make them readable and properly tagged generally aren't the best of questions either. So fix it entirely or leave it alone.
But that's my stance. That being said, I don't like to visit the suggested edits queue. I only act on suggested edits if I see one pending on a question I visit. Usually I also check out the suggestion history of users suggesting such "too minor" edits and flag them if I see a pattern.
I had to dig a bit, as I said I don't do if often. One such example is here: it fixes a typo in the title but leaves another and leaves the language "tag" ("in .net"), it indents the pseudocode but leaves the typos that are in there, and the edit adds no capitalization to the question text, leaving it in the same abysmal state it was before, albeit a slight bit different. I was the only one rejecting that edit, and look at the question now. Was it worth the attention, or should the editor have spent their time improving a more worthwile question?
To me, it's all about effort spent and sending a signal about that. By approving edits that leave obvious flaws, you're telling the editor "This is good, you should do that more often".