Can someone explain in plain words why do we really need publicly visible votes on questions?
According to Why is voting important?, voting
signals to the rest of the community that a post is interesting, well-researched, and useful, while voting down a post signals the opposite
So far so good. However, votes on questions and answer don't seem have the same long term value:
Votes on answers are fundamental feature of the site, allowing future users to distinguish between good and bad content (for some evaluation model).
Additionally to provide short term feedback to the answerer.
Votes on questions seem to have primarily meta value. This includes identification of problematic content (including posts that violate site rules, are off-topic, or simply require further editing) and prioritizing it in the review queues.
They seem to have little value for the future users (question that it doesn't show research effort can still result in the quality answers, and question as such is usually of lesser importance) and to the asker (unlike close votes which eventually provide some feedback, votes are usually far to vague to be useful - it is not easy to act on "lack of research" or "unclear or not useful").
If the meta role of the question votes is their primary application, there should be no need for publicly visible score. It is completely irrelevant to queuing algorithms, and for the human reviewers, a simple visual indicator (color scale, warning sign), should be more than sufficient.
This of course might require detaching votes on question from the reputation system. Action like this would partial disfranchise aksers in favor of answerers as a (undesired?) side-effect.
On the plus side it could significantly reduce perceived hostility, especially if combined with a civil set of canned comments.