This one has been nagging me for a while (i.e. some years) and finally I've decided to ask about it.
I have noticed that when serial voting is reversed, it is the reputation change that is reversed. However, the votes that were cast are not reversed and so the score of the post remains influenced by the serial voting.
I know that individuals can get worked up by the reputation loss caused by serial downvoting, and I quite understand that. However, thinking more widely about the site, isn't the score of a post more important?
To give an example, I have to reach for one of my own posts, because of course I don't have any other way to find posts that have been subject to serial voting. So, this question currently has a score of -5 (1 upvote, 6 downvotes). The majority of these downvotes were part of serial voting episodes. I guess that serial voters might look for the post with the lowest score, and start there, which I suspect is why it has such a low score. Note that I'm not trying to claim that this question is the greatest question in the history of SO, but I equally don't think it's really a -5 kind of a question.
Anyway, examples aside, my question is why serial voting reversal does not also remove the vote? It seems to me that the score of a post is more important than the reputation changes associated with the voting, and that the current system is more focused on the feelings of the posters rather than the information being provided to future readers of the posts.