I have no objection to it. Their question and answer should be marked as duplicates of the more popular one, so long as the more popular actually answers the question and doesn't have a huge flaw in it.
It can accumulate upvotes, and he can use it as a duplicate target/reference in the future.
If others agree, they may direct their duplicate effort towards his better one. At one point, it may exceed the original one in popularity, and an argument may be made that the duplicate arrow should be reversed.
However, this effort is likely to fail, and that is acceptable.
People should only upvote this alternative Q&A if they find it generates added value to justify it.
Generally, it will be a waste of time. It won't even generate more upvotes; the eyeballs directed at a popular "canonical" question, in my experience, do result in the "lower level" answers accumulating upvotes faster than a general question. Very rarely the OP even comes back, notices that your answer points out flaws in the current top answer, and switches the checkmark.
You can link to a later answer in a canonical question just as easily as you can link to your own "private duplicate", so promoting it is just as possible.
The plan is harmless. The gaming potential is small. Unless the person is actually right that the existing canonical Q&A is a bad one, they are unlikely to succeed at their goal of surpassing it this way.
And there are cases where it is actually a good idea, and one should help; when the existing canonical Q&A are poorly worded and it is difficult to edit them to get the essence out; when the existing answer is outdated, or contains a fundamental misunderstanding/error that cannot be fixed without throwing the answer out and rewriting it, or other fundamental flaws. It still probably wouldn't work (surpassing that canonical question and answer), but in these cases it is probably worth trying.