There's no rule that says you can't edit old posts (to my knowledge). In fact, you even get a badge for editing a post that's been inactive for 6 months, so the system seems to encourage it.
If the edit is good (e.g. improves the post), then it is fine. Ideally it should fix every problem with the post, but everybody doesn't catch everything all of the time. In my opinion, an edit that adds syntax highlighting where there was none (or worse, where there was incorrect syntax highlighting) is objectively an improvement, however small. I haven't looked at the edits you're referencing, to be clear; I'm not not making a judgment on those, just on the kind of edits you describe here.
However, this user appears to have had 8 edit suggestions rejected in the span of an hour or so. The Help Center does point out that:
Additionally, any user who submits many rejected edits will be banned from suggesting further edits for 7 days.
I'm not sure what the limit is (it's most likely intentionally secret), but if I had to guess, I'd say 8 rejections in such a short time would trigger said ban.
Likewise, I believe there is a limit on the number of edit suggestions you can do per day (and a smaller limit on the number of edit suggestions you can have active at any one time).
Hopefully the user will have taken notice and either slow down or work to provide more substantive edits in the future. If that's not enough for you, you can always leave a comment under one of the user's posts (or the post they edited last, as they'd be notified then by @-ing them) giving some guidance... just make sure you don't run afoul of the guidelines for editing as put forth by the Help Center.