There are two roomba scripts that will consider duplicates. These are detailed in Enable automatic deletion of old, unanswered zero-score questions after a year?. The 9 day script (the one that hits most closed questions) doesn't look at duplicates, nor does the turbo charged deletion script described in Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion.
A duplicate that has a score of 0 or greater, or an answer will remain for at least 30 days.
A duplicate with more than 2 comments, an answer, a non negative score1, or a reasonable number of views2 will stick around forever.
Those notes:
- If the owner is deleted (from some other inactivity script for example, or never joined SO after the question was migrated here), the a question with score of 1 will be deleted.
- The reasonable number of views is 1.5 views/day. If it has 1000 views, it will stick around for 5 years given the other requirements for deletion are also meet.
The duplicate linked: How to dummy-proof invalid input in c++; error output keeps looping? has two or more comments (this keeps the 365 day script away from it), and a score of 0 or more (this keeps the 30 day script away from it). It will never be deleted under the current deletion scripts (unless someone down votes it).
Given the comment requirement for the 365 day script, it does not mater how popular (or unpopular) the duplicate is - it the 365 day script is hands off any post that has two or more comments, and the 30 day script won't touch questions that have a score of 0 or more.
If the question had an answer before it was marked duplicate, neither script would ever look at it.
Note that this says absolutely nothing about 10k+ rep users with delete votes after two days (who could also just down vote it instead...). Given that this is indeed a signpost to another low visibility question, I doubt they would poke at it.... they're much more likely to be interested in deleting some of the poorly asked ~650 dups of the canonical NPE question that are still sticking around (many with FGITW answers).
Some duplicate questions may eventually be deleted, but often they are left as a signpost pointing people towards the canonical answer to that question.
So I guess its pretty much a entry point for search leading to an answer.