After reading relevant Help Center articles (mainly on duplicates), I'm still at loss, and I would very much like some input from more experienced users and moderators.
Assume a question is asked. It is then quickly marked as a duplicate, closed, and at the same time downvoted for unspecified reasons. I would assume, and this is important in my opinion, that the downvotes imply the post to be of low quality (for any reason), except being a duplicate, because duplicates should be handled by close-votes. Please correct me if wrong.
The problem now, is that someone answers the question and gets upvotes and essentially holds the post hostage as it can no longer be deleted as long as someone (and I quote the error message), "(...) have invested time and effort into answering it.". The answer's author now have personal gain from keeping the post alive as they have obtained and may receive more reputation from it, regardless of SO guidelines.
I recently posted a question which was not arguable a low-quality question: at the very end the conclusion was a typo that led run time errors that was difficult to interpret correctly. The question was (correctly) closed as a dupe, and downvoted. It was also decently answered, by a high-rep user, which gained several upvotes.
The OP then requests the answer to be removed so that the post can be deleted. The answerer denies, stating that his answer is better than those on the duplicate posts. OP then suggests they publish their answer on those posts, but they do not oblige nor respond.
So my question is, what is the correct approach here? I would have thought, for the greater good and quality of SO posts, that such a low-quality, duplicate post should be deleted? And I find it frustrating that a high-rep user would block the deletion for what seems to me, be personal gain rather than what would be in the community's best interest. They should know better, or am I completely off in this?