As a relatively low-rep Meta regular, I just don't see the problem you're talking about.
I've seen plenty of instances of users with less than 50 rep chipping in on a question they didn't create, in the form of posting an answer with their opinions on the matter. Admittedly, sometimes these posts are just comments and don't belong in the answer section, but that happens on Stack Overflow as well as here.
But several times I have seen instances of users with less than 50 rep posting answers that are good, well thought out, and well received. They're able to do this without commenting on the post at all.
Even if you don't post an answer with your opinion, you can still weigh in on posts by upvoting. If you don't have the 15 rep for that, then answering with your opinion on the matter will be all you've got until you get that 10 or less rep you need. (You need 5 rep to hit Meta, anyway.)
Looking at why you want this, it won't help like you seem to think it will. From one of your comments:
I posted suggestions on Meta about certain policies, and because only high rep can comment, they simply deleted my questions about policies claiming they're "unclear" or without any justification, so no-one can read the discussion. If other newbies had representation, the outcome would be much different.
No, the outcome wouldn't have been different, I can almost guarantee that. The 3k+ rep users that closed your question still would have been able to close it, regardless of the comments, and the 10k+ users that voted to delete your question still would have been able to vote to delete it. That would not have been changed at all by users with less than 50 rep weighing in in the comments.
How would one post an answer on a feature request that doesn't have a question, but rather a suggestion to improve the site policies?
This came up in the comments as well, and, as you can see by the answers to this very question, an answer posted that explains why someone feels a feature request is good or bad, explains it, and if necessary gives evidence is perfectly acceptable for these questions.
In fact, they can help to convince other users to support or help reject the change. If the OP's opinion is changed by such an answer, they can accept said answer to show what they think on the matter.
In some cases, an answer to a feature-request can even be pointing out how the existing tools already meet the OP's needs or, in some cases, where to find what they're looking for already implemented in the system.