The remove-if tag is talking about the "Common Lisp 'remove-if' function."1.
In reality there exists only a handful of questions (at the time of writing 4), which actively talk about Lisp. The other 160 questions are all for different programming languages, including: Java, R, C#, C++, PHP, Python (the list goes on).
In my opinion: This tag should be removed entirely even when it is used correctly, it still is only targetting a single method of a programming language. And we clearly don't need a unique tag for every possible method / function for every programming language.
In short, remove the meta tag: remove-if
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Kind of - It is as much useful in describing the contents as tagging the question with every method or keyword used in the code-snippet, the only thing we know without reading the question is that OP is trying to remove something with a condition.
Regarding the unambiguity one could argue that the tag is speaking for itself, also the operation of remove-with-a-condition is quite known across multiple programming languages. So it is used quite consistently across the questions I looked at.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Yes - It still is programming related, and asking a question about these sort of methods can be considered on-topic.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No - With or without the tag, we would still need to read the question, in order to find out what the OP is trying to remove and under what condition.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Kind of - Remove something but with a condition.