Ought someone interfering with someone else's attempt to seek guidance at least have some expertise in the subject matter concerned?
In regard to the specific question:
Should the question have been left closed until there were enough people with expertise voting to reopen it (considering that the moderator who reopened your question had no tag score for those particular tags)?
Should the person who recommended to leave the question open not have voted, since they also didn't have expertise with the subject matter?
If you expect to restrict reviews to people who have some expertise (e.g., tag score), it would make it very difficult to review questions for those specific tags which don't have much interest, activity, or followers. More close votes would expire, and more questions wouldn't get closed as quickly as they needed to be (leading to more bad answers to bad questions).
While you can review for a given tag, most people just don't review that way. Until people review differently, requiring particular expertise would only cause the close vote queue to back up even further than it does now.
In general, requiring expertise would:
Increase time spent reviewing: Consider how much additional time it would take to close 40 (or 60) questions a day, if most reviews had to be skipped due to lack of subject expertise.
Further burden experts: Having a limited number of people who could actively review questions due to their expertise would place an additional responsibility on them to review as well as to answer questions.
Make it difficult to close enough questions: Someone who volunteers to close questions may not even be able to close many questions in a day if there aren't enough questions being asked in their areas of expertise.
Create double standards: If we expect people to have expertise before they can vote to close, we should also require people to have expertise before they can reopen.
While a limited number of questions may inappropriately get closed, it's simply easier to reopen them by bringing attention to the matter.
Let's be careful not to shoot ourselves in the foot by making reviewing more difficult across the board.