tl;dr: this is a problem, but it's also a symptom. There's probably room for improvement in clarifying scope.
Brad Larson has the right idea here (as usual). Here's his commenthis comment, for ease of reference and scrolling reduction:
Let's say that I have identified one person who is pretty heavily downvoting posts in this tag. They're not targeting any one person, so our normal standards of handling serial downvoting don't apply. When one person is targeting another in revenge, that's pretty easy to make a call on, but not here. If I confront them about this, they will state that they're free to vote based on how they judge the quality of the content. The question is: how do I distinguish between votes that someone leaves based on their own strict quality standard and them abusing the voting system?
I see three levels of specificity here, for lack of a better term.
In the most specific case, this question is about VHDL. I do remember from way back in college an eternal debate about whether VHDL (well, actually, Verilog, but that's not too important for this situation) was a "real" language or "merely," as the name says, a "description language," and therefore somehow a second-class citizen. I'm not an expert here, so I'll keep my opinion to myself; it's not my place to issue a decree one way or the other, anyways. Although I will say I suspect that this is like vi vs. emacs or tabs vs. spaces and there will always be some die-hards in each camp.
In the least specific case, this question is about the extrapolation of what Brad says. If someone is downvoting all posts that meet some personal criteria, but those criteria don't fit our traditional definition of targeted, malicious or otherwise inappropriate voting, is that okay or not? I think that's just a little too broad to answer; in other words, the circumstances make a difference.
That leaves us with the middle case. To be fair, I should say that I haven't done any digging on what's actually happening in this actual situation yet. But based on what's been presented so far, I suspect that I've just taken a look at recent voting patterns and it seems that Laurel's ideaLaurel's idea of a "vigilante" (actually, I think that term is sort of loaded, I'm going to say "contrarians" instead) is correct and even if it's not, it's a good discussion to have. So: what do we do when people are targeting a particular tag/topic for downvotes?
We've already established that there's nothing inherently wrong with the posts. The natural target for blame would seem to be the voters. In at least some cases, though, I think the actual fault might come from ambiguity over whether the tag is appropriate or not. That ambiguity makes Brad's question about how to identify abuse unanswerable. If there's a real concern about whether a topic belongs on a site, the community needs to come to consensus about that (through meta discussion). If and when a topic is deemed valid, this sort of mass-downvoting should become off-limits (i.e. a flaggable offense).
That, finally, brings us back around to the topic of VHDL. Is it a legitimate Stack Overflow topic? (Note that I didn't say "programming language"; our only goal is to determine whether it meets our community's standards or not.) Based on the tag's performance so far, most of the community seems to think so—or at least be ambivalent—but it's probably worth coming up with a somewhat more canonical answer (in a fresh, separate meta post). And also for someone like me to see if the initial "vigilante downvoter" assumption is valid after all.