As a close voter, I appreciate expiration because it lets me re-submit the troublesome question into review queue if prior round didn't satisfy me (FWIW same logic applies to reopen votes). If a question wasn't closed (reopened) in review, expiration allows me trigger repeat review after 18 or 28 days depending on views.
This was explained in details a while ago at MSE:
Remember the original problem that the 100-view threshold was intended to address? Well, what happens today if you find a seriously problematic question in the obscure tag that you follow, you vote to close it, and... Nothing happens. Maybe your vote hangs around forever, or maybe enough random viewers trickle in from Google to hit the view threshold and your vote ages away.
What can you do? Not much. You can't re-cast a pending vote, and you can't re-cast an aged vote. Your proposed closure was put before the committee and... ignored. Maybe there were a lot of parking tickets that day.
Some folks raise a flag when this happens, but moderators are often reluctant to intervene on topics they aren't personally familiar with unless the problem is truly egregious - they signed up to be exception-handlers after all, and a question no one cares about isn't all that exceptional. Others lean on the Very Low Quality flag to give questions a second shot at review - but strictly-speaking, this is an abuse of VLQ and will probably get harder as we continue to develop review.
What you'd like to be able to do, upon coming across a problematic question you've previously voted to close, is just bump it back into the close queue. Once upon a time, this was actually the recommended way to handle vote aging on questions if you kept tripping over them - but at some point, it was disabled, probably because folks abused it to keep harping on some personal annoyance.
I happened to be around prior to expiration was introduced and I can personally confirm observations made above. It was real pain to stumble across some old question that you voted close or reopen a while ago and be unable to normally vote again.
It was quite a relief when expiry was introduced and all these pains just went away.