The last couple of days, I've seen a lot of questions roll through the Suggested Edits queue where the only change made was adding/removing a tag. Most of the times, the suggested edit is adding a tag that may be slightly more descriptive, but not enough to really impact the question.
In some cases, I can see where it is warranted. This user, for example, was changing the edt tag (which was actually an incorrect tag in most cases) to the more relevant event-dispatch-thread tag. This seems legitimate.
However, today the Suggested Review queue has been filled with questions where this user removed the stanford tag and replaced it with the stanford-nlp tag. This doesn't seem to change/benefit the question in any real way and seemed too small, so I rejected most of them. I seemed to be in the minority though because most of them were approved, as noted by the 193 rep points earned today through edits. In one particular case, the same user made an invalid edit, gained +2 rep, had the edit rolled back, made an additional edit, which again would appear to be "too minor", had it approved and gained an additional +2 rep having not really contributed any context or benefit toward the question.
So my question is, when is it considered "too minor" in terms of tag edits? I know the reputation gained in this case is not much in the grand scheme of things, but it would appear that the user is gaining rep because reviewers aren't really considering the entire edit and how it affects the context of the question (i.e. the reviewers don't appear to be noting whether the edit "substantially improves the post").
I just want to note that I'm not complaining. I just want to learn for my benefit. It is quite possible my rejections were wrong, in which case I would like to understand the reasoning behind why I should accept what appears to be minor edits. My objective here is that of learning how to correctly respond to such edits.
EDIT: Here is another such case of an invalid edit approved twice with +4 rep by the same user.