TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve > 60% approval rate. You've picked one of the hardest problems in computer science today, success at this would be a contribution to the field of computer science and machine learning.
Concerns:
Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827
The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.
Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.
So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.
TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.
Conclusion:
Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, then the highest rep users give it the green light and increase throttle to full.