This looks to be setting the stage for automatic reopening of questions upon editing. Therefore, I'll adapt my answer to that question for this post as well.
Why not fix the ways posts get into the reopen queue, by e.g. not allowing edits by others than the OP into pushing it there? If only cosmetic edits could've made a post on-topic, it shouldn't have been closed to begin with. It's not like the reopen queue is ever overflowing.
Another thought on this would be to let every N-th edit by OP, or every K-days when edited, a maximum of M-times etc, push the question into the queue. Care would need to be taken of course to prevent abuse.
If anyone other than the OP wants to edit for cosmetics, let them, but don't rob the OP of the chance to get their question into the queue.
One of the few scenarios I can think of where anyone but the OP can edit a correctly closed question to be on-topic1 is when OP doesn't understand the editing principle yet and adds the necessary information/code as a comment (or answer prior to closure) and someone else moves that information to the question body itself. I doubt that this happens often enough by a <3k user to warrant putting the question into the queue directly, and any >3k user can of course vote to reopen themselves. The analysis by Ian Campbell seems to confirm this.
1: if the question could be edited by anyone other than OP to be on-topic it shouldn't have been closed to begin with, rather it should've been edited directly