Let users vote to close again after automatically retracted close votes
- X posts a question Q with some information.
- Later, X posts question Q'.
- (Q' is essentially the same as Q, but Q and Q' provide different information. The combination of the two might provide enough information reproduce a problem or answer the question.)
- Y votes to close Q' as a duplicate of Q.
- X deletes Q, but doesn't update Q'.
- Y's close vote is automatically retracted.
- Y can't vote to close Q' again.
- (When both Q and Q' existed, it would have been possible to merge the two and produce an answerable question. Now that only Q' is available, it's no longer a duplicate, but it certainly doesn't have enough information.)
I'd propose that in this case, Y should be able to vote to close Q' since the close vote was automatically, not voluntarily, retracted.
Background
Today, a user posted a question that was variant of a question they'd asked yesterday. Between the two questions, there might have been enough information to come up with an answer. I voted to close the latter as a duplicate of the former, and left a comment to the user that rather than posting a new question, that the appropriate course of action would have been to edit the original question. The user deleted the earlier question (and it was good that at least one of the two should be deleted). However, the user didn't merge the content of the two, leaving the remaining question incomplete and without enough information to reproduce the problem. I went to close vote for that reason, but found that I couldn't, as I had already voted to close as a duplicate. I understand the general reason for not allowing votes after voluntary retraction (e.g., see Why can't we vote to close a question after the original vote was retracted?), but this is a case where the close vote was automatically removed by the system because the possible duplicate was deleted.