Recently I (along with 4 others) voted to close this question. I was revisiting Meta, and noticed that the question had been reopened. I also noticed that it had been edited, and as I couldn't see any changes I went to the revision history.
I happened to glance at the list of users who had voted to reopen the question, and the first name listed was that of the original poster of the question that was closed.
Poster:
Reopen votes:
Clearly the person who originally posted the question wouldn't feel it should have been closed, and would vote to reopen it. This seems to be the equivalent of allowing a user to upvote their own question in order to recover rep lost due to a downvote, or to upvote their own self-answer and earn rep for doing so.
How is it possible that the poster of a closed question can vote to reopen their own closed question? And doesn't the ability to do so mean it's only requiring 4 votes to reopen it?
And if the person whose question was closed is by design allowed to vote to reopen it after an edit, why am I prevented from voting to close it again if the edit isn't an improvement?