It seems to me that down-votes and flagging serve the same over-all purpose, to keep questions and answers to a standard of quality.
This is sort of loosely true, but they address different types of problems, and in different ways. Not all downvote worthy posts merit being flagged, and not all posts that merit being flagged are downvote worthy, even though there is a lot of overlap.
It's worth addressing at this point that you seem to largely conflate "flagging" with "closing". It's worth noting that flagging is for doing all sorts of things besides closing questions, and voting to close a question doesn't require flagging it. But given your usage of the term, I'm going to assume all usages of "flagging" in your question refer to closure, because flagging is really just a different beast entirely. Note my first paragraph applies to both closing and flagging.
The purpose of a downvote is to indicate that a post is not useful. There are lots of reasons that a post might not be useful, and users are given wide freedoms in using their own criteria for what they think is useful.
Closing is for posts that cannot (or are extremely unlikely to) be given a quality answer. These are much more strict that downvotes. There are certain types of problems a question can have that lead them to either being unanswerable, or not likely to attract quality answers. While there is certainly lots of room for interpretation, there is certainly far less than for downvotes. These are for questions that simply cannot be understood, are way too broad to be answered here, are off topic, etc. But a question may end up not being a useful question even if it is technically still answerable.
So while both downvotes and close votes do serve to increase the quality of content on the site, they both exist to address different types of problems, and in different ways, and so are not redundant.
Someone receiving 10 down-votes is more likely to delete their question and never return than they are to fix it.
This is true enough. Asking good questions is hard. Lots of people either can't, or are unwilling to put the time needed to actually do it. Others still just don't understand why it would be important for them to ask a good question.
Alternatively, I feel like it's more likely to keep someone around if we were to simply flag their question as "Too broad" and pointed them in the right direction to focusing their question while the question was put on-hold might be a bit more understanding and likely to keep that user around to join the community.
Sadly this is just as flawed as the previous point. People don't improve their closed questions much, whether downvoted or not, in addition to typically not improving their downvoted questions. This is mostly for the same reasons mentioned above.
Would it really change anything if it were modified so that clicking the down-vote button made the flagging menu pop-up?
A large enough portion of downvote-worthy questions don't merit flagging, or closure; this would just cause more problems than it would solve, as it would just result in improper flags/votes being cast.