In general, we want people to see StackOverflow as the first result when they Google something. And we also want the questions that people see to set a good example for future visitors. If the post was not locked, it would not be clear to the uninitiated that this type of question is considered off topic.
However you've already demonstrated that the question has little redeeming value. The recommendations by the answerers are very short and and the list of libraries are incomplete compared to the official website. If people were looking for an authoritative and complete list of recommendations, they should see that rather than the question. If the question is deleted, then it will disappear from the search results and no longer be a distraction. On the other hand, poll questions can have redeeming value if the answers are good, but in this case they're not. For example the top answer states:
I looked at most of them a year or so ago, and settled on JsonCpp (http://jsoncpp.sourceforge.net/). I've found it reliable, fast and easy to use, so 3/3.
This is a completely useless answer. The comments (which were posted years later) lament issues with the library, which means that those who follow the recommendation might be irritated by being falsely led. And the answer can't be edited because the post has been locked.
As stated in the comments, the answerers won't lose reputation because they fit the criteria of a "worthwhile" answer (Deleted posts should not influence reputation, Reputation and Historical Archives Reputation and Historical Archives). Even if they did lose reputation, my argument for that is it wouldn't make a difference because:
In example, the top answerer is not an active contributor with only 6 answers and 1 question. They probably wouldn't care if a useless answer they posted 6 years ago was removed (and in fact it's expected. Things disappear on the Internet all the time.)
If they were an active contributor, they'd probably be aware of modern site policies.
So yes, the post should probably be deleted.