The only priority ordering in the moderator flag queue at present comes from spam / offensive flags being shown above all the others and posts with multiple flags being sorted to the top.
"not an answer" flags have a tendency to build up on obvious non-answers, sorting them to the top. They are also very quick to judge, so you'll see flags like that getting acted on faster than others. I can delete dozens of clear non-answers in minutes. The community also handles a large chunk of these (in the last 24 hours, you cast 15 "not an answer" flags and moderators didn't even see 6 of them before they were handled).
Sorting of custom flags has always been a problem. Every issue under the sun gets mixed in there, and some of them can take hours to investigate. Important issues are mixed in with complaints about answers being downvoted without comments and demands that moderators answer their urgent question. Not to mention the piles and piles of migration flags to every site under the sun, few of which I'm comfortable handling. We need some kind of triage or keyword-based sorting of these, but at present the best we have are some quickly thrown together userscripts.
I've noticed that we tend to run into cascading problems with custom flags, where once a certain number of them have built up in the queue, the queue size tends to rise dramatically. We had a relatively low flag queue at the start of 2018, but things built up and got out of hand recently. My guess is that Stack Overflow will run another moderator election soon to account for this difference.
I do try to spend most of my time with custom flags, but the order in which I approach them can be fairly random. Sometimes I go to the newest flags and see if there are any pressing issues that can be dealt with quickly. Sometimes I go to the oldest flags to handle issues we've been putting off for a while. Sometimes I sort for all instances of plagiarism in the queue. There isn't any enforced ordering to this, so times will always be variable.