I can understand not showing previous review decisions for a change, to prevent the previous thoughts from helping to influence new ones. But I think it would be useful to at least show reject votes on a pending proposed change.
Reject votes point out flaws for a change. If the reviewer is not familiar with the tag, they may miss a big problem. If they don't check for it, they may miss that it's a duplicate or copied content. Even leaving a comment does not mean the reviewers will notice or care, with comments at the bottom of the page and not really standing out much.
For instance, with the "duplicate" reason, if someone comes through who is not as acquainted with the documentation's tag, they may not realize a topic/example already exists. They may not go looking, and they may not notice comments on the matter.
As an example, a duplicate example was approved in regex since the review queue rolled out. Myself and another user in the tag had already rejected, prior to the queue release, for the example being 1) a duplicate and 2) in the wrong topic. When I checked in this morning, all the proposed changes were cleared. When I checked, I was bewildered to see this example had been approved, despite my comment (which had been there a long while) stating what was wrong with it.
I had proposed changes in to delete a couple duplicate examples. I can't help but wonder if this would have happened if there had been some kind of indicator that this was an issue, aside from a comment on one of them that no one (except another regex reviewer from before the queue was out) seems to have read.
For another example, with "copied content", it could be (and probably already has been) the same scenario as with "duplicate". If you do your due diligence, and another reviewer does not, they may not notice/read/care about any comment you post on the matter and instead approve the copied change.
"Incorrect", "other", and "too specific" are all things an unfamiliar reviewer could easily miss, especially other.
The only review reason that should be easy for anyone to see without being pointed out is "vandalism", and even then someone will almost certainly miss it sooner rather than later.
Documentation is different than Q&A. While Q&A edits should be able to be reviewed without knowledge in the subject, in most cases, Documentation should be the opposite and almost always require subject knowledge to verify the edit does not invalidate the example/topic or make them incorrect. Since documentation is meant to be correct rather than just an attempt at someone explaining something they think they know (as answers are) we need to empower reviewers without subject knowledge with that little bit extra information they may not have, and may not catch even if they do briefly search on the internet for the correctness of the change.
If the team is completely against showing all rejections, "duplicate" and "copied content" at least should be shown, to give reviewers a heads up that they should check the suggested duplicate or the potential plagiarism before reviewing.
If, as suggested in the comments, it's decided only users over a certain rep threshold should be able to see these votes, the minimum rep to review docs should be raised to meet this level. The reviewers really should be able to see this, in case something important is pointed out in the reject reason but not in the comment section, or in case the reviewer misses the comment.
Something about this needs to be done. Documentation should be accurate in technical detail. Since the review queue does not limit who can review what tags*, we have to have a way to show the reviewers that don't catch the comments and don't know the material there is something off about the proposed change. This is still an issue, and something needs to be done. Showing the red "reject" message to future reviewers seems like a good place to start.
* I do not feel we should limit the queue, for example by tag score. Some of us have a hard time finding questions worth answering in the tags we are interested in. However, if this remains a problem, I would gladly support this more extreme measure to help ensure the quality of Documentation topics and examples.
As a side note, since the introduction of the review queue, I have rolled back four changes that should not have been made in the regex documentation, and I am debating whether another new one needs rolled back. There have been about 20 regex changes proposed, and approved, since the queue was added and zero rejected. That number includes the changes that I made to roll back changes that should have been rejected. This feels like too high of a false positive rate.