There's no coalition.
We know each other, we have a memory of previous contacts with each other. I'd also hazard lots of us have already have your ideas about people targeting others, voting circles, popularity (and in-popularity) voting, and we've grown over it.
Yet I think you get this wrong. We don't vote for our "friends". We're not "friends". Or at least, not in the sense that is usually meant by friend. We vote for useful content.
What seems to confuse you, is that some people are brighter, wiser and generally more insightful than others. It's quite possible that a large proportion of my comment upvotes are on a small subset of long time meta users. That's not because they're my friends, I've never met them, I've never discussed directly with them.
It just so happens that they have a high accuracy in a lot of things Stack Overflow. So while I'm sympathetic to your perception, please reconsider.
There's no coalition.
As for anonymity in posts, I don't have any hard opinion on it. Maybe it'd change voting, in one way or another. Maybe we would downvote even more. On the other hand, we also learn people's style. There are some posters on meta I can recognize just by the body of their posts.
I'm not really aware of the technical difficulty of doing that, but it seems it's not a low hanging fruit. I think it's easier to realise that
There is no coalition.