I was still with Univsion when this deal went down, and know a good deal about the people involved. The seller had no political interest. They just found that the Soros group had more money than Salem, whatever their intents were.
I know a dozen or more people who were interviewed for management positions; all but two realized that the two women had no radio vision. The two that took positions are very sorry they did.
The first thing they did to "neutralize" WAQI was proof that that was, indeed, their intent. They thought that Miami needed a more balanced talk format and were wrong, but that was their intent from the very beginning.
Yes, it did. They immediately ordered WAQI to be more "balanced" in their perspective.
What happened is that nobody with real radio experience and success wanted to work for them. The moves they made on their own were poorly thought out, and convinced any valid and viable candidates for executive positions that there was no upside.
That is exactly what happened. Somewhere on the left, there arose a fear of Salem getting "all those stations" in important Hispanic markets. Those who pushed the project did not, obviously, know that programming could not be changed overnight. One person involved told me that they were told that "the programming could be quickly flipped, just like ABC and CBS and NBC start a 'new season" each time Fall rolls around."
The whole effort was to keep those stations away from Salem. The concept did not work for a variety of reasons.
WAQI was hardly a zero-audience station until they castrated it. Several stations, such as the Fresno and Las Vegas FMs had significant audience, and the LRGV cluster is very significant as was WAQI and the Chicago AM station.