The reality is you probably shouldn't be doing mass-retags without full edit privileges.
If you are going to do them anyway, make sure you follow these rules:
Always get community consensus first, before adding/removing a tag. We often have a problem with this on Meta. Someone will bring up a potentially sub-optimal tagging situation for discussion, and there will be a relatively new user who sees that and tries to help by going out and undertaking the project themselves. The problem is, they haven't given the community a chance to weigh in and might be making things worse. Naturally, it's impossible to get an absolute consensus on anything, but you need to avoid the impulse to be the Fastest Gun in the West when it comes to retags. (Not just to wait for consensus, but also because there may be more efficient, less disruptive ways to handle retaggings if you get a moderator involved.)
Don't just add/remove a tag—make your edit count. In other words, always fix all of the major problems with a post. If there's broken or sub-optimal formatting, fix that. If there's noise, like greetings, salutations, and/or meta-discussion, then remove it. If there's a grammar error in the title (or some other obvious spot), correct it. If you know something about the topic area (which is really the only case where a user without full editing privileges should be doing retags), then consider improving the title and otherwise clarifying the question. Make your edits comprehensive and maximally useful; otherwise, you're risking many of them being rejected by reviewers for wasting their time.
Spread your edits out, ideally over several days, so as to minimize disruption. The system will partially force you to do this, since there's a limited number of edits that you can have "pending" at a time, but there's no ultimate daily limit on suggested edits, so you need to self-regulate there.
(The same rules apply to users with full edit privileges, too, albeit with a bit more flexibility, because we can trust them to use good judgment.)