I think this is just a result of the Meta Effect. Here's what I think happened.
A user posted a how-to question with no attempt to solve the problem, and there was a single comment (as far as I can see) saying they needed to show an attempt. The question was closed a little while later. (The fact that the question is sufficiently narrowly scoped, with a clear and detailed specification, and probably shouldn't have been closed at all is besides the point).
The user didn't understand why their question was closed, and posted about it on Meta. The meta post displayed a rather poor awareness of how the main site, as well as meta, work. The post miscategorized curators as moderators, called curation interfering, etc. The user's comments didn't help matters either. (Interestingly, the comments section seem to suggest that the main post was indeed closed for lack of effort). Anyway, these interactions almost certainly contributed to the -15 score of the main post.
The meta post itself was (incorrectly, IMO) closed as a duplicate of a post asking whether a "how to build an app?" question is appropriate. The meta post was deleted shortly thereafter. This left a post on main with a -15 score by a user who'd made a poor impression on Meta. Given the increased scrutiny on the post, it's not at all surprising that it got deleted, the existence of multiple upvoted answers notwithstanding. Just the Meta Effect at work. If the user hadn't brought up the question on Meta, or brought it up differently, it might well have been reopened.
I'll note that there is no requirement that one be a SME in order to cast a delete vote on a question. One can vote to delete questions where one is not aware of the subject matter at all, but where the question is clearly not useful. The question you've linked to is not one of them though.