It's important to separate a question that is subjective from a question that is asking for opinions.
Meta is all about subjective questions. There is no one single objectively correct answer to most discussion questions.
That is not to say that most meta questions are all about opinions. An opinion contains no facts or references, doesn't reason about the consequences of an action, doesn't provide evidence, etc. An opinion is generally not very useful to most meta questions.
Hearing someone say, "I think that this question shouldn't be closed" is not productive. Hearing someone say, "Because of Foo, and having observed Baz and Bar, I believe that the site will be better off if this question isn't closed." is productive, and does help the site.
So when a meta question is phrased in such a way that it leads people to provide evidence, facts, and to reason about such evidence, even if the interpretations are open to interpretation and cannot be objectively analyzed as correct or incorrect, they are productive. When a meta question discourages, or doesn't enable, facts, expertise, evidence, etc. and encourages users to only state their personal opinions, they aren't useful or productive questions.
This is all discussed in the blog post Good Subjective, Bad Subjective as well, which has some good examples. This blog post discusses expertise about topics such as programming and parenting. On meta questions should be surrounding expertise on the process of running an SE site.
Now as for the example, I'd say that the given example is not a question that encourages asking only opinion. People are providing facts, evidence, and reasoned arguments in their answers.
I could see it being "too broad" though. The dozens of answers is actually a pretty strong indication of that...