I run out of close votes a lot. In fact, in almost any given day in which I actively participate, I use up all of my close votes! And I am really, in the grand scheme of things, not a very active user on this site.
Here is a graph of the number of unclosed questions with close votes per month:
There are too many poor questions coming into the site at too fast a pace for the current userbase to close them all.
So then, when was the last time this was addressed on meta? As far as I can tell, it was here, in 2011, when the number of close votes on SO was increased to 50. I have placed a bounty on that question, but since this is really a Stack Overflow-specific problem, a discussion here makes more sense.
A certain Cody Gray commented this on the above question back in 2011:
Or possibly, they could increase based on the individual closer's past history, much like has been recently implemented for flagging. If questions that you vote to close are frequently closed (meaning 4 other users agreed with you), you're obviously voting to close in the appropriate circumstances, and your daily allotment of close votes could increase accordingly.
This seems like a reasonable compromise if scaling based on reputation is deemed unfair. Really, though, there's nothing "unfair" about giving people more close votes. Each user still gets a chance to vote exactly once on each question. Users don't get any more weight than they used to (especially, of course, those with gold tag badges).
Now, sure. We need a limit on close votes. But I'd argue that the current number is not enough. Especially with the new Triage queue, it's far too easy to burn through close votes in the close votes queue, then to be left entirely unable to do anything in Triage.
It's already been noted plenty that once we run out of close votes, Triage becomes relatively useless. If no triage-specific improvement gets implemented, I feel that the total number of close votes really needs to be raised. Currently, we're forced to choose between close votes and triage.
What about the robo-reviewers? Well, yes, we should still impose a cap on how many questions can be reviewed in a queue per day to handle that. And yes, there still needs to be a reasonable limit on how many close votes can be cast per day. But even if I spend my daily duty in the queues, I should still have enough close votes left over to close the questions I come across "organically" simply by monitoring the (dismally low-quality) popular tags.
Whether it's an increase across the board, an increase scaled by reputation, or an increase scaled by past close vote history, we need an increase.
Edit
I discussed this in the comments, but I thought I should note it in the question to clarify.
I'm not really complaining about a failure to close all the questions. That won't ever really be fixed. But frankly, I want to be able to close questions that I deem poor. When I run out of close votes, I stop trying to answer questions in poor-quality tags because I'm frustrated I can't close the awful ones. This actually reduces my positive contributions to the site, and I don't imagine I'm alone in that.
I'm actually discouraged from answering questions once I run out of close votes. Is this my problem? Maybe. But it does cause frustration, and I don't think I'm the only person who feels that way.