So... This is actually a bug.
I'll explain why in a minute, but first I need to apologize - my memory of how this stuff works has gotten a little bit unreliable after 6 years. I recalled that we'd implemented edits as failures at one point, but kinda forgot about... Well, a lot of what happened after that.
See, turns out we've had this discussion before. Editing is kind of a dodgy thing to try & classify as a "positive" or "negative" action, particularly in queues where you're not being asked to identify really horrible things like spam.
So, 5 years ago - about 4 months after we first introduced audits - we changed how audits interpret these responses: if you try to edit spam, you fail; if you try to edit anything else, you pass.
And, sure enough, that's how it works to this day.
...except, well... We kinda forgot about suggested edits.
I mean completely forgot about them. For years, they just didn't work at all in the First Posts and Late Answers queues. You wouldn't fail or pass an audit, you'd just end up kicked out of review and on the normal edit page. Until 10 days ago, when I got the bright idea of making suggested edits actually, y'know, do something for an audit.
Unfortunately, I didn't bother checking to see if what it would do was correct. I tested it, saw that it failed for "known-good", and vaguely remembered that being the correct behavior at one point without recalling why that turned out to be a terrible idea...
...which is how you got what you saw yesterday: the bit of code responsible for determining how an edit should be treated in response to an audit checked the response for the edit flag, but completely ignored the suggested edit flag, which caused it to fall back on the default behavior: which just so happens to treat edits as failing everything.
As a result of my oversight, 62 audits have unnecessarily failed over the past 10 days, potentially contributing to the temporary bans from review of up to 24 reviewers. I've submitted a patch to correct the problem, and will be going through the history of these audits to lift any bans that were unfairly applied.
Please accept my sincere apology for the mistake and gratitude for bringing this to our attention.