Nowhere in the article does it say they intend to do US politics & news. In fact, most of the article says the opposite.
Since they won't be doing local programming, what is left in talk radio but
national news/talk?
Nearly every subject of interest in Spanish language talk is local... and I saw and researched that in places as diverse as Miami, New York, Chicago, Dallas-Houston-San Antonio, LA, Phoenix, San Francisco and others.
And in research for morning shows as recently as pre-pandemic years, the same conditions and interests showed up. Even light subjects, like humor, have enormous geographic limitations and restrictions due to origin, language, accent and social conditions.
That is why I said before that the focus of interest in such a talk format is in local social issues.
Depends on what that content is, and so far, they're not specific.
If you read the description of the person the want as COO (about two screens long) on their site, it is very obvious that they will be all talk, and social/sociopolitical issue based.
That has been the focus of three national Spanish language talk networks in the past. All have failed due to the lack of interest in national themes and the failure to find personalities who could do the broader social issue subjects. A very major problem is that live talk radio tends to reflect the accent and vocabulary of the national origin of each host... scripted and accent controlled TV does not have that issue anywhere near that extreme.
The word for "bug" in one country is the one for the male organ in another. The word for "bus" in one is the word for "child" in another... and so on.
Again, those who are first generation Hispanics (second and beyond just does not use much Spanish language media) don't listen to AM, and did not in their home nations.