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Tag: univision

  • Donald Trump pleads for Google/YouTube change before midterms

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    President Donald Trump has shared a message on Truth Social, pleading with Google and YouTube to bring back Univision before the 2026 Midterm Elections, writing, “Google, for the purpose of FAIRNESS, please let Univision back!”

    Newsweek has reached out to Google outside of regular working hours via email for comment.

    Why It Matters

    In September, Google’s YouTube TV dropped Univision’s Spanish-language networks after both sides failed to come to terms on a contract renewal.

    YouTube TV first launched in 2017, then costing $35 a month. The package of channels, which includes a mix of local networks, news channels, entertainment channels, sports channels, and children’s channels, now costs $82.99 monthly.

    Univision is the largest Spanish-language broadcaster in the U.S., with 59 stations that are either owned or operated or both. YouTube also pulled TelevisaUnivision channels UniMas, TUDN, Galavision, FOROtv, De Película, De Película Clásico, Bandamax, Telehit, Telehit Música, and TLNovelas, in addition to the stations.

    What To Know

    YouTube issued a statement about dropping Univision, which read, “TelevisaUnivision has over 160 million subscribers and billions of views across YouTube, where they generate ad revenue from their content. On our paid live TV subscription service, YouTube TV, however, TelevisaUnivision only represents a tiny fraction of overall consumption. Since we have not reached a new agreement with them, their content is no longer available on YouTube TV.”

    Responding to this, TelevisaUnion said in a statement, “Google’s YouTube TV has refused to ‘Do the Right Thing’ and dropped Univision from its platform—stripping millions of Hispanic viewers of the Spanish-language news, sports, and entertainment they rely on every day.”

    The statement continued that “Google’s actions are especially tone-deaf and egregious on the eve of a potential government shutdown, disregarding the appeals of government officials and Hispanic organizations who urged them to keep Univision on the main bundle.”

    Now the president has weighed in with his own plea. “I hope Univision, a great and very popular Hispanic Network, can get BACK onto the very amazing Google/YouTube,” he wrote on Truth Social on October 4.

    “It has been taken out of their package, which is VERY BAD for Republicans in the upcoming Midterms,” the president wrote, adding that Univision has been “so good” to him.

    The Univision outage came before the federal government shutdown, which was a story Univision journalists had been covering.

    Univision has launched a campaign, dubbed “Do the Right Thing Google,” which involves outreach to politicians. The TelevisaUnivision chief executive Daniel Alegre wrote in an open letter, “Univision is a trusted voice for Hispanic Americans, especially in times of emergencies, elections and for other critical news and events.”

    YouTube dropping Univision comes as it settled a lawsuit brought by Trump, after the platform suspended his account following the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol—it has agreed to pay $24.5 million, and comes after social media sites including X and Facebook settled similar suits over suspending the president’s social media accounts.

    What People Are Saying

    President Donald Trump, in a post on Truth Social: “I hope Univision, a great and very popular Hispanic Network, can get BACK onto the very amazing Google/YouTube. It has been taken out of their package, which is VERY BAD for Republicans in the upcoming Midterms. They were so good to me with their highest rated ever political Special, and I set a Republican Record in Hispanic voting. Google, for the purpose of FAIRNESS, please let Univision back!”

    Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, wrote in a post on X: “Google/YouTube should not put Univision and Telemundo behind a paywall. Google shouldn’t be abusing its monopoly power by forcing millions of Texans & Americans to pay extra for Spanish-language programming. That’s not right and it’s not fair.

    Senator Bernie Moreno, an Ohio Republican, in a post on X: “Just one week after getting caught red-handed censoring conservatives on its platforms at the behest of [former President Joe] Biden bureaucrats, Google is now attempting to jack up prices on millions of Americans who rely on channels like Univision. That’s wrong and I’m demanding answers.”

    What Happens Next

    The 2026 U.S. midterms are scheduled to take place in November that year.

    It is currently unclear how long the government shutdown will last before a solution is reached.

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  • Trump hears from undecided Latino voters

    Trump hears from undecided Latino voters

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    Trump hears from undecided Latino voters – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Former President Donald Trump attended a Univision town hall with Latino voters a week after the television station held a similar event with Vice President Kamala Harris. Town hall moderator Enrique Acevedo joins “The Daily Report” to explain its value and the top issues discussed.

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  • Harris reiterates support for

    Harris reiterates support for

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    Las Vegas — Vice President Kamala Harris fielded questions about immigration, the economy and healthcare at a town hall with Univision Thursday. Polls suggest these issues are critical to the Latino voting bloc, and many of these questions were posed by people who had very personal, emotional stories to tell.

    Supports “Dreamers,” pins blame on Trump for bipartisan border bill

    Jesus Aispuro, a first-time voter from California, told Harris he has friends who are “Dreamers,” undocumented immigrants brought into the country as children. Pressing her on what she’d do to protect Dreamers under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, Harris said she’d prioritize an immigration plan that establishes a pathway to citizenship. 

    In response to a case in front of a federal appeals court over the fate of DACA, Harris’ campaign issued a statement during the town hall saying Harris “will always stand with Dreamers and keep families together” and urging Congress to pass “an earned pathway to citizenship for these young people.”

    Yvette Castillo began her question by noting she and Harris have something in common: both of their mothers are dead. Castillo noted her mother died six weeks ago, and while she was alive, she did not succeed in acquiring U.S. citizenship. Harris’ mother died in 2009. 

    “What are your plans to support that subgroup of immigrants who have been here their whole lives and have to live and die in the shadows?” Castillo asked.

    Harris repeatedly said she was sorry for Castillo’s loss, and then she said the bipartisan border bill that former President Donald Trump lobbied Republican lawmakers to vote against could have created “a comprehensive earned pathway to citizenship for hard working people.”

    She went on to argue that this failure to enact legislation bore responsibility for the outcome Castillo’s mother had. 

    “Had your mother been able to gain citizenship, she would have been entitled to health care that may have alleviated her suffering and yours. And this is one example of the fact that there are real people who are suffering because of an inability to put solutions in front of politics,” Harris added. 

    The Latino vote is crucial for Harris’ path to the White House, and polling shows it’s a more competitive fight than in 2020. Harris holds an 18-point advantage over former president Donald Trump, according to a September CBS News poll. It’s a smaller gap compared to President Joe Biden’s 33-point advantage with Latino voters in a 2020 CBS News exit poll. 

    “The largest segment of undecided voters right now are still within the Latino community. So doing town halls like this, it’s going to places like Arizona… having folks like the rest of us all across those state, are going to be very important,” Rep. Robert Garcia of California said after the debate. 

    “Latinos are going to have an outsized influence in this election because the margins are so tight,” he added. 

    Criticizes Trump over reports he sent COVID tests to Putin, can’t list three virtues about him

    Mario Sigbaum, a 70-year-old independent and undecided voter, questioned how Harris was able to become the Democratic nominee and said the late switch resulting from President Biden’s late exit from the race “inclined me to vote for Trump.”

    After Harris praised Mr. Biden for supporting her run, she highlighted her own support from Republicans and argued Trump admires “dictators and autocracy.” She criticized Trump over reports he sent Russian President Vladimir Putin a COVID test machine during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “I’m sure people here have family members or friends who died [from COVID], and he secretly shipped off COVID tests to Vladimir Putin of Russia. When people died — hundreds were dying every day,” Harris said, adding that she and Mr. Biden tried to address the disproportionate rate of Latino and Black Americans dying from COVID infections.

    “So, I present that to you, sir, to say, this is an extraordinary time,” she said. 

    Asked by a voter at the end if she could name three virtues of Trump, Harris noted his love for his family, but declined to add more.

    “Family is one of the most important things that we can prioritize. But I don’t really know him to be honest with you. I’ve only met him one time on the debate stage. So, I don’t really have much more to offer you,” she said. 

    Hurricane Milton response

    The town hall began with Ramiro Gonzalez, a voter from Tampa, Florida, who noted more than one hurricane had struck his home. 

    “Rumors are that your administration didn’t do enough to respond to the last hurricane. What would you specifically do, or your administration do, to help us in the Tampa Bay area or the Central Florida area with this hurricane?” he asked Harris. 

    Harris responded by decrying disinformation spread about the federal response to recent hurricanes. “I have to stress that this is not a time for people to play politics,” she said. She then listed her continual briefings and contact with state and local officials on the ground, and warned against companies that are raising prices in impacted areas. 

    Economy and health care: “Prices are too high, still… and we have to deal with it.”

    Asked by Wendy Solares — a mother who houses her children, as well as her parents — what Harris would do to help the middle class, Harris took a more sympathetic tone to the rise in the cost of living. 

    “I know prices are too high, still. You know prices are too high, still. And we have to deal with it,” she said, before listing out her economic plan to lower costs through being more aggressive on price gouging by grocery companies and by issuing tax credits for parents and down payment assistance for first time home buyers. 

    Martha Rodriguez, a 62-year-old homeless woman whose medical conditions — a heart attack and “long COVID” — caused her to lose her job and income, asked Harris how she’d help disabled citizens get their insurance faster through Social Security. 

    Harris noted that she pushed to designate long COVID as a condition that should be covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act, and that as president, she would work to make sure medical debt does not affect credit scores. 

    “The point is being very simple, frankly, which is that all people, regardless of disability, should have equal access to housing, to job opportunities, to education, and again, community, and there’s still a lot of work that we have to do in that regard,” Harris responded.

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  • Outrage against Univision grows after Trump interview

    Outrage against Univision grows after Trump interview

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    Univision has found itself at the center of a growing controversy after a recent interview with former President Trump that critics have blasted as too friendly.

    The interview that aired Nov. 9 was noticeably warm, and Trump received little pushback as he gave false or misleading statements on border security and immigration policies he instituted as president.

    Backlash from certain corners of the Latino community was swift, including calls for more balanced reporting and an outright boycott of the television network ahead of the 2024 election.

    Latinos are considered a crucial voting bloc — and largely up for grabs — in next year’s election, likely to be a rematch between Trump and President Biden. Although Latino voters have historically favored Democrats, the Republican Party in recent years has made significant progress in courting their votes.

    The exclusive interview with Trump therefore raised significant alarms within the Democratic Party and its allies that the leading Republican candidate was making unchecked claims to important swing voters.

    Actor John Leguizamo posted a video to his 1 million Instagram followers Thursday criticizing the Spanish-language media company for “softballing Trump” and reportedly canceling ads for Biden. He said the television network has become “MAGA-vision.”

    He implored fellow entertainers, athletes, activists and politicians to join him in boycotting the network until it reinstated “parity, and equality and equity” between the presidential candidates. The television network has also requested an interview with Biden, according to the Washington Post.

    The more-than-hourlong interview with Trump was conducted by Enrique Acevedo, an anchor from Mexican network Televisa who is not a Univision journalist. The two media groups merged last year. Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner reportedly helped organize the interview.

    “All you have to do is look at the owners of Univision,” Trump said in the first few minutes of the interview when asked about Latino voters and recent polls showing him defeating Biden in 2024. “They’re unbelievable entrepreneurial people, and they like me.”

    “They want to see security,” Trump added. “They want to have a border.”

    During the interview, Trump made questionable claims that the partial wall built along the southern border was made possible by Mexico providing thousands of soldiers “free of charge,” and that former President Obama laid the groundwork for the controversial policy at the border to deter illegal crossings that became known as the family-separation crisis. Acevedo did not push back on either claim.

    “It wasn’t just a friendly interview. It was an embarrassing 1-hour puff-piece with lots of smiles and no pushback with a guy who relished in attacking, belittling and otherizing Latinos and Latin American immigrants,” Ana Navarro-Cárdenas, a prominent Nicaraguan American political strategist and commentator, said on the platform X, the company formerly known as Twitter.

    León Krauze, a veteran news anchor for Univision, has since resigned from the network. He did not provide a reason for his departure.

    State Sen. Susan Rubio (D-Baldwin Park), a member of the California Latino Legislative Caucus who is running for Congress, said she knew many other Latino leaders who were “personally upset” about the interview.

    Rubio said she was “appalled” at how the former president “was allowed to just continue to spew lies and go unchecked” during the conversation. She called the interview “an insult to our entire Latino community.”

    The network is “absolutely influential” in households like hers, she said, describing it as a news source she and her Spanish-speaking parents view as trusted and unbiased.

    “Our community relies on this information to be truthful. They rely on this source that has been trusted by the Latino community for many, many generations,” she said. “They should have done a better job of making sure that our community is not lied to.”

    The Congressional Hispanic Caucus plans to send a letter to the television network requesting a meeting with its chief executive, Wade Davis, and calling for stronger guardrails against disinformation, according to a draft copy of the letter reviewed by The Times.

    More than 70 organizations — including prominent Latino groups such as the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, America’s Voice and the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights — signed an open letter to Davis and other TelevisaUnivision executives, sharply criticizing the interview.

    The letter, first reported by the Post, asks that the network “conduct a thorough internal review, take corrective measures, and reaffirm its commitment to unbiased reporting and to keeping the Latino community informed and up-to-date with facts and truth,” according to a copy reviewed by The Times.

    The controversy is more complicated than what it seems, said Mike Madrid, a GOP political consultant who has a forthcoming book called “The Latino Century: How America’s Largest Minority is Shaping Our Democracy.”

    Madrid, who is a vocal critic of Trump, said the objections to the interview are reflective of how the Democratic Party and other left-leaning organizations have taken Latino voters for granted — and relied on the television network to promote their candidates and policies for decades.

    Since the late 1980s, Democrats have banked on Latino voters to win elections, Madrid said. But over the last decade, Democrats have begun “hemorrhaging” second- and third-generation Latino voters who are U.S.-born and English-dominant speakers.

    Madrid doesn’t dispute that the interview with Trump may have been biased or too cozy, but he said it demonstrates the media company’s shift toward the middle and, therefore, a new Latino audience.

    “Where were they for the past 30 years when the Democratic Party was getting softball interviews? The Democrats have taken this base vote for granted. They assumed it was there and Univision would always be in their corner, would always be championing them and advocating for their candidates and policies,” he said. “When you’ve been the beneficiary of media bias, objectivity sounds like betrayal. That’s what’s going on.”

    Instead of promoting a boycott of the network, which Madrid called “absolute madness,” Democrats should adjust their strategy and start courting Latino voters on a variety of issues, such as the economy and jobs, rather than just immigration.

    “The Democrats have to figure this out very quick that going to war is not in their best interest,” he said. “They are going to have to learn to fight for this vote, when they haven’t for decades. … And they have less than a year to figure this out.”

    Times staff writer Stephen Battaglio contributed to this report.

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    Hannah Wiley, Julia Wick

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