1. As Boonie stated, if the walls are within 2H, the global will likely govern. This should be modeled for internal stability by making one wall the height of the combined piers. Once the grid lengths are determined there, check the global with the proposed profile. I agree with the above that settlement could be an issue, but if your walls are not of great height, it will likely be minimal, and within the tollerance of a stable wall. Remember good CQC/CQA is essential to construction of a good wall, and proper compaction will help to reduce settlement.
2. I thought I had seen someone referring to sloped grids on here and saying it was OK. Might be wrong on that. If anything, they should not slope up from behind the wall face. As for a basis to reject it: Ask to see the calcs performed for internal stability using a slope on the grids. Most, if not all, computer programs for MSE walls model the grids horizontally, as they are typically installed. Unless they can show numerically that it works, reject it.