Whether you should delete a question is more or less the same as whether or not you should delete an answer with a negative score. The only real difference is you need to consider whether there's useful information in not only the text of the question, but in the combination of the question and all of the answers posted to it.
In short, if you personally think it's a useful post, keep it, even if others don't agree with you. If you can fix it to make it a useful post, then great. If you've been convinced by others that it's not a useful post, then just delete it.
I also feel the need to point out that meta does in fact have bad posts, and downvotes are used to reflect that. While, yes, there may exist some posts that are extremely well written, well researched, about interesting topics, etc. but that are making some sort of proposal that others feel is not a useful proposal to implement, people like to overstate how often that's the reason a post is downvoted.
It's very common to see posts that either aren't proposals at all, or are poorly researched, unclear, lacking information, or are otherwise problematic. In my experience proposals that aren't worth implementing are more likely to have those problems as well, not less likely. Just dismissing all downvotes on your posts as "people just disagreeing" is...not merited and in my opinion not healthy. At least be open to the possibility that there are other problems with a post.
So if you think that your question is a good useful question, but is simply one in which it is proposing something that required a detailed reason explaining why it's not feasible, then leave it. If it was just not a useful proposal (or not a proposal at all), then consider whether or not the question is actually adding value, and whether you can fix the problems causing it to not be useful.