The current behavior is like this:
- A question gets closed
- A user edits the question pushing it into the reopen queue
- That same user later votes to reopen it
- The reopen review is invalidated
This also affects the author of the question (while a user needs 3000 reputation to vote to close/reopen someone else's question, they only need 250 reputation to vote to close/reopen their own question). This can diminish an OP's chance to get their question reopened.
The behavior is based on edits and flags, since votes to close/reopen are internally also just flags. In many cases this mechanism is useful and prevents abuse.
In case of edits and votes to reopen the potential abuse would be to push a question into the reopen review queue twice, once by editing, once by voting to reopen. It's all not as easy as it sounds, though. Shog9's answer to (3) describes what you'd have to do to abuse it:
So the question'd have to be closed immediately, then you'd have to cast your reopen vote pretty quickly thereafter, the question would have to go through review promptly, get no more reopen votes for four days, and then you'd have a bit less than a day to make your edit and hope the review went your way... 'cause on day 5, the task would once again become invalid.
I suggest to change the behavior. It depends on what is easier to implement but possibilities are
- ignoring reopen votes and allowing the loophole (preferred by Shog9 ("In spite of this obscure loophole, I kinda prefer this option: it's dead-simple."))
- introducing checks for the actual case to be prevented
Sources: