It is broadly the same.
The primary difference is that we don't ever need to make these featured, since there's no need to get it in front of the larger audience of Stack Overflow users. It's sufficient (if not better) to limit it to Meta regulars weighing in on the proposal, since they're the most knowledgeable about how tagging works on Meta.
Other things are all the same:
- Don't waste your (or anyone else's) time removing tags that aren't causing any harm (or adding tags for no benefit whatsoever). "If it looks like pointless busywork, it probably is pointless busywork..."
- If there is a very small number of questions (Meta is on a smaller scale than main, so say < 20–25), and you've conferred with at least one other knowledgeable Meta user as a sanity check, then you can go ahead and remove the tag.
- If there is a larger number of questions, then you need to go ahead and post a burninate-request (also tagged with meta, of course), providing with your rationale for why the tag should be removed, and give the community a chance to weigh in before you just start doing stuff. Never misinterpret apathy as consensus.
Like rene says, there can and will naturally be a bit less ceremony on Meta, but vigilante retagging/burnination is a total mess, and it's no less messy on Meta than it is on main. If anything, it's more annoying because of the site's smaller size, and more dangerous because of how Meta abuses the Q&A model as a discussion platform—plenty of things here are counter-intuitive. The process exists because it solves many problems and prevents difficult-to-repair errors. I simply won't tolerate it being ignored altogether.