I disagree!
Wait, first off - you're right, the "not constructive" came later. At the time this was proposed and implemented, it was still "subjective and argumentative". Which, IMHO, was a lot more downvote-worthy... But I'll get to that in a minute.
I don't think "not constructive" should imply a down-vote, because these aren't necessarily bad questions... They're just not good questions for our sites. Opinions, debates, arguments, polling and extended discussion are a part of most of what we spend our lives saying and writing; learning to ask a question that doesn't encourage them is not always easy. Neither is learning to recognize a question that demands them.
There's a big fat section of the FAQ dedicated to explaining this, but all too often I find that neither the people voting to close nor those trying to re-open have read it. Or even that bit of text on the close dialog itself.
So for these questions, I'd much rather see folks put more effort into evaluating them on their merits, attempting to edit them into a more constructive form, and voting to close when that's not possible. And making a conscious decision to down-vote the question and poor answers when that's clearly deserved: when the question is clearly subjective and argumentative.
Off-topic and NaRQ are less excusable: you should be able to know what's on-topic for the site you're asking, and learn how to ask a real question merely by reading what has already been asked and answered. When those basic requirements are met, learning to do so constructively is something we can and should be able to teach.