I'm not sure if this was proposed before in clear (if it was, please mark my question as duplicate), but when this idea comes up in discussions, most seem to agree it would be a good feature:
The proposal:
When a question is proposed for reopening (when it enters the reopening queue), notify each of the initial users who voted for closing it, as an invitation to revise their vote based on either modifications to the question itself or based on the argument/comment of the person who initiated reopening.
As an example case where this might have been a good feature, I'll point to a recent question I interacted with, which I think was wrongly closed, where I invited 3 of the closers to revise or explain their votes. Shortly after, the question received 2 reopening votes (besides mine) (probably from them, but I can't be sure 1̲). None of them brought any counter-argument in the question comments.
Do note that I'm not interested in reopening the question per-se. I pointed to it as an example on how the closing/re-opening system, in current form, can hardly be described as "working well". Even though it appears my argument convinced 2 of the initial closers, the question is still closed. Yes, I have the option of additionally inviting the initial 2 closers to also revise their votes and chances are they might do it, but it seems like a big effort one has to put into opening a closed question and that, in general, is not a good thing, IMHO.
I'd go as far as to ask you not to interact with that question at all, to allow it to remain relevant as an example for this one. As a matter of record, the linked question currently sits at 35 views and no modification happened in its status in the past 24 hours (afaict) so chances were it would have remained closed.
Getting back to the subject at hand, I'm wondering if, in principle, the vote for reopening a question coming from someone who initially voted for closing it should not weigh more than a normal reopen vote, since the question technically doesn't have 5 closing votes anymore (one was retracted).
Another, related issue would be that current re-opening process involves simply pushing a button. One cannot write a description for reopening reasoning. When such a description is necessary, one only has the option of adding a comment under the question or adding a note in the body of the question itself.
As a final thought, while researching all of the above, I found out that both close and reopen votes expire, each under their own conditions. Could anyone point me to any documentation or discussions/reasoning on why they do? It's not like the person who voted changed their mind, is it? Why does a vote towards closing or reopening a question becomes irrelevant?
The research:
Here are the questions I went through before asking mine. They discuss various aspects of closing/reopening, but none stated the proposal above in clear. I actually went through more than the ones below, but I didn't list duplicates [of duplicates]:
- Notification on reopening downvoted question
- A Second Chance: Rework the Reopen System (see comments under the question - the idea of notifying initial voters comes up a few times).
- One-time notification about questioned close votes
- How to handle question in the reopen queue that I voted to close?
- Notification on edit of downvoted content
- Allow retract close vote and close-as-duplicate votes
- Let users vote to close again after automatically retracted close votes
- Make it possible to retract reopen votes
Specifically, I'm interested in knowing:
- if this was ever considered/discussed as a feature request
- any of the pro and against arguments on it
1̲ As it turns out from comments, my assumption I got the original voters to change their vote was wrong. I suppose getting people to change their vote is difficult and unlikely to happen, which means my proposal would do more harm than good.