TL;DR I don't think this is a problem.
It seems like there is always a surge of activity on Meta during elections, yes. Personally, I have never noticed any problems with would-be moderator candidates posting excessive numbers of (bad) questions or answers. Most serious mod candidates already have the Convention badge, anyway, and the nomination period is actually a pretty short window in which to write 10 good posts that aren't duplicates of existing posts.
This would seem to cause the phenomenon of individuals asking questions with the soul purpose of getting up votes on meta without any substance.
I haven't seen this happening. Keep in mind that Meta votes don't mean the same thing as main site votes. If the post in question isn't any good ("without any substance"), it will get voted into the sub-basement. Also keep in mind that it's easy to check who's doing this on their profile page, as several other people have pointed out.
I think the site runs near perfectly, so any question I could possibly have is already addressed on meta. But one thing we haven't yet discussed is: "Why 10 questions and why 2 upvotes?"
Wasn't it at least 2 questions of at least 10 points upvoted last year?
As far as I know, the Convention badge has always been 10 posts with a score of 2, never 2 posts with a score of 10. It's much harder to write 10 posts that are considered good than to write 2 posts that happen to hit a nerve. The criteria help show that anyone holding that badge really has contributed, on many occasions, to the Meta site.
As for your final question:
And is there a way I can speed up my seven remaining required posts without clogging up the tubes with already-asked questions since two of my other submissions are upvoted really high?
Yes! Write seven more good posts. :) Seriously, if you have a good question or good answer to a question, please share. If not, well... please don't.