TL;DR: Bad audit is bad. It's not spam and shouldn't have been nuked.
The warning Our system has identified this post as possible spam; please review carefully
is shown when the question/answer that's currently being reviewed has been flagged as spam by one or more user(s). It is shown regardless of whether the review is an audit or not afaik.
Regarding the answer: That is not spam. The link leads to an official google site that offers the option of testing your website, and - IMHO - that is anything but spam, it isn't even NAA or VLQ as it does attempt to answer the question by pointing towards possible errors as well as linking to a way of further analyzing the problem, yet can still exist as answer without the link.
Regarding the answer by ChrisF: I can perfectly understand users being unwilling to click on unknown links, whether it's because they are at work, or don't want to expose themselves to malware etc., all cool. But I personally expect those users to have the sense to not flag those questions or answers as spam.
I mean, come on, if there's no indication of the post being a spam post, hop into a chat room (i.e. the SOCVR) and ask for a quick check. This takes a minute, if even. Or just google the link, and then check if
- the link is on the first google page (if not, that's fishy)
- the information text displayed on the result-page gives any indication about the site
- definitely-not-fishy-websites, i.e. G+, facebook etc.
I really hope that I am not the only one that expects at least that amount of effort of users before they're spam-flagging. I really do.
Here's what happens if you follow the steps above:
Googling thinkwithgoogle
yields this as first result (german language): 
What you can (and can not) see, is:
- first link is that page, alongside its sub-pages => Looks anything but fishy
- second link is a twitter profile
- fifth link is a facebook profile with ~25k likes
- sixth link is a google+ profile with ~3m followers
- seventh link is a linkedin-profile
You can tell me whatever you want, but how does one get to the conclusion that nuking those answers without even checking the content of the link is anything but blatant abuse of power?
There are 4 links on the first google result page, all linking to official, verified and well-known social networks (facebook, twitter, google+, linkedin), two of which you don't even have to click to know anything about the follower count etc., as it's openly displayed.
How can one be so abstrusely lazy? It's mind-boggling.