If a question is significantly edited (we'll say for the sake of argument, a delta of 500 added characters in the diffcheck), the vote to close votes, specifically for "unclear what you're asking", should go to a "limbo state". The votes would still count to close, but unless the voter re-checks the question and verifies their vote, it would still be in "Limbo". The voter can also in this time retract their vote, which would either count as a vote to re-open, or a point off the votes counter. If the limbo vote is ignored, then it will still count as a vote to close, but for each "limbo vote", the number of votes required to re-open a question will go down by one, with a minimum of 2.
This means, that If a question was asked, and 4 people put in a VTC, and the asker significantly edited the question, then unless those 4 people ratify their votes again, those 4 votes are now in limbo. only 1 more vtc is needed to close the question, which is later provided. Since the question has 4 limbo votes, the number of people needed to re-open a question is 5-4=1, but 2 is the minimum, so the asker needs 2 votes to re-open.
I feel this is needed because currently the question system is a "plug n' forget" system, where people will vote and forget about a question. This in no way shape or form encourages any author who knows how the system works to actually edit the question. The route that brings the answers will always be to Delete, Edit, Repost. This is a bad system for SE, but it happens anyway. I feel that some system along these lines would be incentives for authors to edit their questions instead of hacking their way around the system.