UPDATE:
You should not have anything besides <li> a a driect descendant of <ol> or <ul>. https://dequeuniversity.com/rules/axe/4.7/list?application=AxeChrome
It is an accessibility issue.
Please disregard the following opinion:
Putting anchor tags, or any tags, around list-items is perfectly valid at the time of writing this in 2022. Though it may be considered unusual or bad practice.
From the specs: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/grouping-content.html#the-li-element
Any element whose computed value of 'display' is 'list-item' has a list owner, which is determined as follows:
If the element is not being rendered, return null; the element has no list owner.
Let ancestor be the element's parent.
If the element has an ol, ul, or menu ancestor, set ancestor to the closest such ancestor element.
The "owner" of the <li> tag is not determined by its direct parent, but by the closest ol, ul, or menu ancestor.
No problems should arise, accessibility or otherwise, from putting other tags around it. As long as it is inside a ol, ul or menu at some level, it will find its owner. It's the only way you would make the entire <li> container including the bullet or number clickable.
<ol>
<li>
<a href="example.com/1">This is fine.</a>
</li>
<a href="example.com/2">
<li>This link is the entire container.</li>
</a>
<a href="example.com/3">
<div>
<div>
<div>
<li>This has four parents before the <ol.></li>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</a>
</ol>