The edit review system makes rejecting edits harder than approving them.

The result is that those who reject edits are discouraged, and review slower.  Those who approve edits are encouraged, and review faster.

This results in people doing edits getting told "good job, do another like that" with a review success, even if the edit in question was poor.  This creates a second order effect of more poor edits.

<kbd>Approve</kbd> is a one click step.  Lots of encouragement.  You do have to spot blatantly horrible random spam "tests" and say "that looks like a test".  I have yet to see a test that looks merely like a bad post.

The next two are a pair:

<kbd>Improve Edit</kbd> requires editing the post, and counts as an approve.

<kbd>Reject and Edit</kbd> requires editing the post from scratch.

So if the poster fixes 7/20 errors in the post, you either have to approve, or redo the 7 fixes.  So for these two paths, approve is clearly the one the website encourages you to use if the edit contained anything useful.  Half-assed edits are approved more often than they should be, encouraging more of same.

Next we have <kbd>Reject</kbd>.  If you click on it, you now have to look at a restricted set of options, all of which are narrowly constructed in what seems to be an attempt to discourage you from picking one of them.

To vote <kbd>copied content</kbd> honestly, you'd have to do research and find that content.  We are talking orders of magnitude more work than approve.

<kbd>invalid edit</kbd> seems aimed at someone clicking the wrong button.  Your post doesn't seem to match this -- it looks like an edit, if a crappy one.  These happen, but this is again a narrow option from its description.

<kbd>radical change</kbd> could apply, but in your case to tell it was radical you'd have to either understand and manually render the stuff, or look at the rendered output.  So now we are talking about 5-10 times more work than "Approve".  This is the right vote for your question.  Again, this is narrowly described -- the change has to be **radical** for this to be the right vote, and has to cause the original meaning to be not just obscured but **lost**.  While I would pick this, by the plain words it doesn't even apply to the edit in question!  The example is removed, but the original meaning of the post isn't lost, just obscured.

<kbd>vandalism</kbd> might apply, but it's defacing, it is not spam, and it isn't "inappropriate" in the context of defacing/spam.

Which leaves <kbd>other</kbd>, where the person rejecting the edit has to type out "the person who did the edit removed screwed up and caused a code sample to disappear".  Again, orders of magnitude more work than <kbd>approve</kbd>.

The powers at be at stack overflow have regularly made the Reject reasons narrower and added hoops to jump through in order to reject an edit, while Approve remains easy, and the tests are good enough to stop a "[drinking bird](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_bird)".  The result is that the suggested edit queue is full of people who keep on getting rewarded for nearly mindlessly Approving anything that seems vaguely reasonable (ie, isn't random gibberish).  Those that Reject reasonably often end up taking so long that even if they matched the number of mass Approvers, they would lose out on most votes.

So the Rejectors do orders of magnitude more work, and see their Rejects getting overridden.  Over time they find the options for rejecting made more narrow, and extra hoops added, discouraging them even more.

In short, it was approved because stack overflow edit queue causes bad edits to be approved.