My experience has been that you can't reliably get people to un-downvote.
Bounties, meta posts, etc. can bring more attention and garner upvotes to counter the downvotes, but it's extremely unlikely that people will come back to the question and reverse their votes.
I've encountered a similar problem with close votes. For example: How to inspect only new Java code? The question initially was poorly worded/formatted (the information needed to make the question on-topic was only present in tags). The question was then closed and downvoted a few times (got to -4 at one point, I believe.) I stepped in and edited the question to try and put it back on track, which garnered some upvotes and brought the score back to zero.
I pinged one of the close voters asking them to re-evaluate the question, but I received no response and have seen no change on the question. This is just the most recent example of several. I occasionally go in and try to rescue a question that I think shows sincere effort, isn't a duplicate, and can be easily reworded, but this almost never accomplishes anything.
People also don't usually bother with re-checking duplicates. For example: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39257194/how-do-i-compare-parameterized-parts-of-an-array (and yes, I know that it was automatically closed)
I don't blame people. there are a lot of questions of dubious quality, and I can't imagine many people have the energy to go back and try and rescue something that they consider marginal at best, not when there's a lot of other things to do.
TL;DR
People don't come back and look at 'low-quality' questions. Therefore, you won't get many un-downvotes.
P.S. I would hope to avoid a big meta effect on the linked questions - those users didn't poke the sleeping giant, I did.