Years ago, I asked a question that is now probably one of the top search engine results if you search for anything related to pointer size in C++. It's a 10 year old question which still gets discussion from time to time. Recently, someone asked a similar question. A C++ gold tag badge holder decided to close my question as the duplicate (?!). I asked what the deal was, and their reasoning was the other question had better answers. I disputed this politely, explained that the answers on the new question were far too verbose and the concise answers of my question were far better. Plus, the recent discussion on the question still made it relevant (side note, I also wouldn't be surprised if a lot of the upvotes on the new question were a result of people redirected there from my question). The community seemed to agree with me, and it was voted to be reopened. A week later, a different C++ gold tag badge holder closed it again as a duplicate of the same target.
What's the deal here? Why is voting to reopen even an option if the question can be closed again by a single user just disagreeing and closing it for the same reasoning? I get it if it's something that's actually a serious violation of the rules, but closing the original question as a duplicate after the community voted to reopen seems a little silly, no? Especially considering I explained pretty clearly why it was the better of the two questions. It's not a big deal, I'm just looking for some clarification on how the vote-to-reopen should be expected to work.