Naturally, no one knows for sure unless those 4-ish users see this Meta question and feel compelled to respond. But I can think of one reason why they didn't. So can you:
At first, I didn't vote because I don't like wasting my MCVE vote unless I'm relatively certain others will vote with me … [Also,] I wanted to see what the rest of StackOverflow would do.
I would phrase it a bit differently, but it's essentially the same idea:
Users with moderation privileges often abstain from exercising them because it feels like a Sisyphean fight. I could vote to close as "unclear" or "lacks an MCVE", but that would only be one vote out of the required 5. Experience tells me that my vote is likely to be wasted, and the question won't be closed. Apathy sets in, and, most of the time, I stop using my votes at all. Why fight a battle that can't be won, and just ends up wasting my time, energy, and good cheer? At most, I downvote and navigate away from the page, hoping I'll find a better question—a better way to spend my time—and trying not to dwell on this crappy question any longer than necessary.
(This doesn't necessarily apply to me. I use my votes to the maximum extent possible, even though I am often disappointed by the lack of a real impact that they seem to have. I will even leave comments advising on ways and entreating people to fix their questions. In other words, I tend to keep banging my head against the wall. I'm not sure if that says more good things or more bad things about me.)
This kind of fatigue is especially common with users who, as you note, "are relatively active and have contributed much to the site." They do "know what privileges they have access to and when they apply", but they choose not to use them because, as the saying goes, they've hunted this dog before. They know what to expect, and the apathy has already begun to set in.
Now, these users are, in general, not the Meta crowd, so I expect this answer will be fairly unpopular. (It is not a coincidence that Meta regulars are the ones responsible for the question now being closed.) It'll be nice if I can manage to avoid getting a bunch of comments lambasting and critiquing the behavior I describe here. Such criticisms miss the point. This is very much in line with normal, expected human behavior, and you aren't going to stop it by shaming these people. That'll just make them more apathetic—and possibly piss them off.
Alas, I do not believe that all hope is lost. I know of one way to fix this, and that is to give real teeth to these users' privileges. A question that is utterly unclear, lacks any sort of relevant code, completely omits a description of the expected/required/observed behavior, or simply cannot be reproduced is obvious. Closing it shouldn't require a quorum, and it certainly shouldn't require a unanimous decision from all affected parties. Trusted users who have demonstrated expert-level knowledge for a particular technology should be able to single-handedly close such questions, without muss, without fuss, and without wasting 4 other people's time. Such domain expertise and experience with our site rules can be demonstrated by amassing enough reputation in a particular tag to earn a gold badge. We already give these people the ability to instantly close questions as duplicates, and deciding whether something is a duplicate is honestly a lot more difficult than determining whether it has one of the above-listed problems.
You hold a gold tag badge in java. You instantly recognized the problems with this question. You should have immediately been able to take care of it. The fact that you couldn't means that the system is failing, not the users.
Frankly, I'm not very motivated to go looking for a duplicate that I can use to close a crappy question. The amount of effort I'm willing to put into dealing with a question is—rightly or wrongly—commensurate with the amount of time and effort it seems like the asker put into it. If you can't be arsed to ask a decent question, then why should I put forth the enormous amount of effort to find a duplicate—and especially for no reward? It's been proposed before to incentivize the finding of duplicates, and although I wouldn't be thoroughly opposed to that, I don't think it's necessarily the fix to this problem. The onus shouldn't be on trusted users to find a duplicate if they want to close an incomplete, unanswerable question. They should be able to do it directly. Besides, you can't even tell for sure if the question is actually a duplicate when it lacks critical details.