Questions with an appropriate title are more likely to attract attention from people that are interested in that topic (because the title helps people know whether the question is relevant to them or not, and for older questions at least they're more likely to appear in Google search results). People who find a question interesting are presumably more likely to upvote it.
A good title may also deter people who aren't interested in the question from reading it (which is actually a good thing because there's no benefit to people reading irrelevant posts; they're unlikely to answer, upvote, or personally benefit from reading from the content). In fact, I don't have data to support it, but I would assume that they'd actually be more likely to downvote than to upvote (because they didn't find the content helpful).
Also, the quality of the title tends to correlate with the content of the entire post. People that put forth effort to write a good title are probably also spending more time and effort on the question as a whole (and vice versa).
In fact, the very first section of the How to Ask page in the help center specifically advises users to write a good title and gives some directions on how to do so (complete with 6 examples of good and bad titles), so people who write good titles are more likely to have read the help center documentation.
That being said, I don't agree that this is a bad thing. A good title is an important part of writing a good post and indicates the amount of effort they put into the post overall. If someone wrote a poor title, that means that they either didn't read "How to Ask" or they didn't apply its advice. So the root cause here is newbies not reading (or disregarding) the help center, not the fact that people dislike questions with poor titles.