Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Miami Cubans oppose Democrats’ Spanish-language radio deal

- By Adriana Gomez Licon News Service of Florida contribute­d to this report.

MIAMI — A major effort by Democrats to recover lost ground among Hispanics by purchasing Spanish-language radio stations is stirring up opposition in Miami, where Cuban exiles describe it as an attempt to stifle conservati­ve voices.

The Latino Media Network, a startup founded by two political strategist­s who worked for President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign, reached a $60 million deal to acquire 18 AM and FM stations in 10 U.S. cities from Televisa/ Univision. The agreement announced June 3 still needs Federal Communicat­ions Commission approval.

These markets are diverse — Hispanics with roots all over Latin America listen to the stations in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, Houston, Chicago, Dallas, San Antonio, McAllen, Fresno and Las Vegas. The network said it “will focus on creating content that addresses the different cultural and political nuances that impact different types of Latinos.”

But the deal isn’t going over well in Miami, where Radio Mambí is popular among hardline Cuban exiles.

“We would need to be deaf and blind not to understand the motives behind this buyout,” Irina Vilariño, who co-owns a chain of Cuban restaurant­s in South Florida, said at a news conference held by a coalition called the Assembly of the Cuban Resistance.

The network has raised a total of $80 million from high-profile investors such as actress Eva Longoria, who is also a Democratic political activist, and former Florida Republican Party chairman Al Cardenas, now a critic of former President Donald Trump. The debt involved is financed by Lakestar Finance LLC, a company affiliated with Democratic mega-donor George Soros.

The deal has been harshly criticized by Republican­s in Florida, from the Cuban American House delegation to U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and Gov. Ron DeSantis. Coalition members said they are exploring legal ways to contest the takeover.

The DeSantis campaign responded in part by buying radio ads. In one running on Radio Mambí, DeSantis warned Spanish-speaking voters of “leftist disinforma­tion” and said that in the “fight against socialism in America,” the left and Soros “are coming with their ideologica­l agenda.”

Rubio, meanwhile, was joined Tuesday by fellow Florida U.S. Sen. Rick Scott in asking the FCC to investigat­e the stations’ sale.

“Given the importance of the FCC’s stewardshi­p over the limited AM and FM bandwidth available across the United States, we ask that the commission carry out its due diligence and thoughtful­ly scrutinize the takeover of these stations by a partisan organizati­on only announced last week,” Rubio said in a statement.

Democrats have pointed to some shows on Radio Mambí and other Spanish-language radio stations when raising concerns about disinforma­tion, especially following the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol. Republican­s say those accusation­s are used to distract from the Democrats’ lackluster performanc­e among Hispanic voters in South Florida in the 2020 election.

Stephanie Valencia, who helped lead Obama’s White House Office of Public Engagement, co-founded the Latino Media Network. She heard about four or five months ago that TelevisaUn­ivision had plans to sell radio stations. TelevisaUn­ivision did not respond to a request for comment on how the deal come about.

“We did not want to miss that opportunit­y to obtain such a large number all at once and keep them in Latino hands,” Valencia told Associated Press, adding that other interested parties did not appear to have Latino programmin­g.

Valencia said she wants to ensure a smooth transition.

“We are going to be looking at this from a business perspectiv­e. How do we maintain the spirit of what these stations are? How do we balance journalist­ic integrity and ensure we build spaces for free speech?” she said.

One of the most popular commentato­rs, Ninoska Perez, a fervent Trump supporter, has assured listeners that they have been told there would be no major changes.

Martha Flores, who hosts an evening show on Radio Mambí, isn’t sure about that. She attended the news conference but declined to speak.

“Look at this,” Flores said, pointing at her eyes watering. “I know I would just cry.”

Radio Mambí got its start in the 1980s with support from the Reagan administra­tion and has long received federal funding to beam Radio Marti’s anti-communist content into Cuba for an hour after midnight each morning. Cuba, in turn, tries to jam the station’s signal from reaching the island.

Cubans in Miami recall growing up listening to the station in the kitchen or while in the car. Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez shared at the news conference that as a girl she would she would hear it so much that she get annoyed with her father.

“Why do I have to listen to this?” Nunez said she would tell her father while he drove her to school. “He insisted. He would never let me change the dial,” Nunez said, adding that she later followed the same tradition with her own daughter.

The group still has to file with the FCC to transfer the broadcast licenses. A public comment period will follow. If approved, the startup would take full ownership in late 2023, after a one-year transition period.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez, left, speaks at a news conference along with Cuban exiles about their concern of the sale of two local Spanish language radio stations on Wednesday at the Bay of Pigs Museum and Brigade 2506 headquarte­rs in Miami’s Little Havana neighborho­od. Cuban exiles describe it as a clear attempt by the Democrats to stifle the conservati­ve and antiCommun­ist voices in a Hispanic community where they’ve lost ground.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez, left, speaks at a news conference along with Cuban exiles about their concern of the sale of two local Spanish language radio stations on Wednesday at the Bay of Pigs Museum and Brigade 2506 headquarte­rs in Miami’s Little Havana neighborho­od. Cuban exiles describe it as a clear attempt by the Democrats to stifle the conservati­ve and antiCommun­ist voices in a Hispanic community where they’ve lost ground.

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