So... right now you have a total of 25 suggested edits.
- 4 are rejected
- 21 are accepted
That's not bad... and looking at the four rejected ones, they probably shouldn't have been "rejected", as at least two of three of them were edit conflicts that were valid suggestions and the fourth was rejected and edited but should have been improved instead of rejected.
You've got 114 total reputation, meaning you've earned 36 from edits and the remainder (77) from questions and answers.
That means you earn 32% of your reputation from edits and 68% from posts.
If you continue at that rate, you'll get to the 2K reputation for unlimited editing well before you hit the 1k reputation cap for rep earned from suggested edits (which, if you do the math, takes 500 accepted edits)... this, of course, assumes you don't start downvoting answers once you earn that privilege or give the rep away in bounties. You'll also get a free bonus of 100 reputation once you hit 200 rep.
So, in the general case... 500 edits... that's a lot. I'm sure that someone who uses SEDE could find out how many users have ever suggested 500+ edits before reaching 2k reputation... and I'm going to bet it's extremely rare... and, on top of that, you're forgetting one thing...
Suggested edits are the only way to earn reputation from editing, so, if you really want to earn reputation and get access to the other moderation abilities such as downvotes, review queues and vote counts... you need that reputation in order to actually get there. By giving high-performing editors early access to unlimited editing, we would take away their easiest source of reputation income, which is a reward in itself.
As such, and as someone who only earns reputation on this site from editing and has a 100% edit approval count (out of 10)... no. I don't want this to be implemented.