Moderators are not directly involved at all with whether or not a feature request is acted upon, although if we support something strongly, we can nudge them more to try and get it implemented (no guarantees). If a feature request is outright silly and we know, for sure, it would never be implemented, we will decline them as a way of indicating to the Stack Exchange team that they don't actually need to look at this one, but past that, it's entirely the Stack Exchange team that decides what gets implemented.
The Stack Exchange team itself tends to avoid participating in feature request discussions until it's been discussed more by the community. They look for a clear-cut problem that's being solved and reasons why this feature is a solution to that problem. They'd generally be discussed internally at a staff meeting in order to determine the merits as far as statistics and other things that normal users wouldn't quite be able to pinpoint. If they feel it warrants a response, they'll give one.
The team is not always working on every feature request. Generally, if it hasn't been declined it's still being considered, but that does not mean it's being worked on. They prioritize feature development based on urgency and necessity, only working on a handful at a time, some of which probably weren't even requested on a Meta site anywhere.
So nothing really "happens" - they keep an eye on them across all the Meta sites, and have a general idea of what features the community desires. More importantly, they have an idea of what problems the community is having. And there you have your key, the problems. Proposed solutions are great and all, but identifying the actual problem behind something allows the team to implement solutions that target that specific problem, rather than solutions that just kind of cover it up.
feature-request
-tagged posts across the network, I believe.