It sounds like the larger issue would be the relatively rare cases when a moderator makes a mistake on handling a flag. Rather than some kind of auto-approval (which has problems, as others have pointed out), it seems like this could be addressed by giving moderators the ability to change decisions on flags after they've been processed.
We already have a limited form of this for spam / offensive flags, where we can manually change the state of an accepted flag from "helpful" to "disputed" in order to nullify penalties on poorly applied flags. This is to deal with the damaging effects of targeted flags or mistakes in applying these flags.
It might be possible to extend this to allow moderators to flip other declined flags to being marked as helpful, if a mistake was found in how something was processed. That would target the core of what you're worried about here (like in the linked question).
However, I worry about this causing more drama than it solves. If someone gets a declined flag, and they disagree with it, will they keep trying until they find another moderator to overturn it? An argument on Meta right now about a declined flag can tail off because there's nothing else that can be done about a processed flag. If someone knew it could be overturned, would they just keep arguing about what's probably a minor thing until they got their way?
Maybe such a flag state switch would only be something that could be done by the moderator who handled the original flag, so that it could only be used in cases where the original moderator admitted an error.
Again, I don't know if this would make things better or worse than they are now. Most arguments about incorrect flag handling seem to end well, with either a mistake being admitted or a decision being explained to the satisfaction of the flagger.