Note: I am not including a link because the purpose of this post is not to call anybody out.
I recently edited a question. The user had misspelled the word "within" in the post's title. I looked at the pending review, to find out one of the reviewers rejected the edit:
This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability.
Two other reviewers have approved the edit. When looking at the stats on the reviewer who rejected the edit:
[Reviewer] has approved 378 edit suggestions and rejected 510 edit suggestions and improved 5 edit suggestions
I have not checked the exact statistics for edit approvals, but this user's reject percentage seems several standard deviations above the average. And with a pretty large sample size at that.
In this case, it the review process will succeed because of the fact that the other reviewers approved the edit, overriding the reject. But this would not always be the case.
What type of measures are in place to make sure the review permission is not being abused? If a user rejects enough edits that other users approve, will he or she get flagged for serial edit rejection?