Over-the-air federated edge learning (Air-FEEL) is a communication-efficient framework for distributed machine learning using training data distributed at edge devices. This framework enables all edge devices to transmit model updates simultaneously over the entire available bandwidth, allowing for over-the-air aggregation. A one-bit digital over-the-air aggregation (OBDA) scheme has been recently proposed, featuring one-bit gradient quantization at edge devices and majority-voting based decoding at the edge server. However, the low-resolution one-bit gradient quantization slows down the model convergence and leads to performance degradation. On the other hand, the aggregation errors caused by fading channels in Air-FEEL is still remained to be solved. To address these issues, we propose the error-feedback one-bit broadband digital aggregation (EFOBDA) and an optimized power control policy. To this end, we first provide a theoretical analysis to evaluate the impact of error feedback on the convergence of FL with EFOBDA. The analytical results show that, by setting an appropriate feedback strength, EFOBDA is comparable to the Air-FEEL without quantization, thus enhancing the performance of OBDA. Then, we further introduce a power control policy by maximizing the convergence rate under instantaneous power constraints. The convergence analysis and optimized power control policy are verified by the experiments, which show that the proposed scheme achieves significantly faster convergence and higher test accuracy in image classification tasks compared with the one-bit quantization scheme without error feedback or optimized power control policy.