Daniel Alegre — CEO of TelevisaUnivision, the largest Spanish-language media company in the world — joins the Chuck Toddcast for a genuinely revealing conversation about the single most misunderstood bloc in American politics: the Hispanic vote. Alegre's central argument is one both parties keep failing to internalize — the Hispanic vote is now an issues vote, not a reliably Democratic one, and Latino voters have become measurably more engaged precisely as they've started shopping their vote across abortion, democracy, the border, the economy, and immigration enforcement. He's blunt about 2024: the Trump campaign communicated with Hispanic voters far more effectively than Democrats did, bookending its messaging around Telemundo town halls while Democrats took the community for granted. Alegre offers a striking data point from Texas — James Talarico outspent Jasmine Crockett 8-to-1 on Hispanic outreach and won that demographic by roughly the same margin — and notes that Ted Cruz never actually won the Hispanic vote until he put in serious, sustained effort to reach them. The tactical lessons are sharp and counterintuitive: campaigns have to communicate with Hispanics differently than the general population, white politicians attempting to speak Spanish get a mixed reception at best, and sending a Spanish-speaking surrogate in your place is actually worse than not showing up at all.
The conversation digs into the rich complexity beneath the catch-all term "Hispanic." Alegre explains that political leanings differ dramatically by country of origin (the network's biggest constituencies are Mexican, Cuban, and Venezuelan), that there are significant differences between first- and second-generation Latinos and the third and fourth generation, and that in more heavily Hispanic cities many families are actively maintaining their heritage rather than assimilating — even using AI now to translate content for the genuinely different variations of Spanish across Latin American communities. He shares polling that should reshape how candidates pitch themselves: two-thirds of Hispanics say they're barely getting by, 80% are lending money to family or community, and yet over 90% still want to live the American dream — which is exactly why optimistic messaging resonates with Latinos while doom-and-gloom falls flat. Alegre addresses the perennial accusations of bias against his network (he argues it moved not to the right but to the center after the Jorge Ramos era, with a goal of providing information and letting the audience decide), reflects on Mexico electing a Jewish woman in Claudia Sheinbaum, and explains the network's massive sports footprint — it broadcasts 70% of soccer games in the U.S. and holds major World Cup rights. His closing message is one neither party can afford to ignore heading into the midterms: Hispanics are the swing vote in America now, and any campaign that treats them as a monolith — or worse, as a constituency it already owns — is going to lose them.
Link in bio or go to https://getsoul.com & enter code TODDCAST for 30% off your first order.
Protect your family with life insurance from Ethos. Get up to $3 million in coverage in as little as 10 minutes at https://ethos.com/chuck. Application times may vary. Rates may vary.
Refresh your wardrobe with Quince. Go to https://Quince.com/chuck for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns.
Timeline:
(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements)
00:00 Daniel Alegre (TelevisaUnavision) joins the Chuck ToddCast
02:45 Distinctions between Telemundo and Univision post-merger?
04:30 Priority now is to create content that resonates with all hispanics
05:45 Adding English content doesn’t work when targeting spanish speakers
07:30 “Spanglish” is different for different Latin American communities
09:00 Using AI to translate for different variations of Spanish
10:30 Many overdubbed American media used same Spanish voice actor
12:00 Does instant translation tech diminish need for learning 2nd language?
13:00 People still want to connect with own language and community
15:30 Are politicians finally realizing they need to diversify their pitch to Latinos?
17:15 The Hispanic vote is now an issues vote, not a Democratic vote
18:15 Abortion, democracy, border are all key issues for Hispanics
19:15 Economic issues & immigration enforcement also key for Hispanics
21:30 Campaigns must communicate to Hispanics differently than general population
22:15 Trump campaign communicated to Hispanics much better than Dems in ‘24
23:30 Talarico outspent Crockett 8:1 communicating to Hispanics, won by same margin
24:30 Ted Cruz never won Hispanic vote until he put serious effort into reaching them
25:30 Over half of Latino vote in Los Angeles mayoral is still undecided
26:45 In a bilingual home, if parents switch to Spanish something serious happened
27:30 Significant differences between 1st-2nd gen hispanics and 3rd-4th gen
29:00 In more hispanic cities, many are maintaining heritage & not assimilating
31:45 Political leanings differ based on country of origin
33:00 Influx of immigrants at the border frustrated latinos in south Texas
34:15 Hispanics generally are very faith and family focused
35:45 Campaigns would do well to target the predominant section of hispanic vote
36:30 How well are white politicians received when they speak Spanish?
37:30 Sending Spanish speaking surrogates is worse than not showing up
39:00 Which candidates have impressed you with outreach to hispanics?
40:45 Trump campaign bookended messaging around Telemundo town halls
41:30 2/3rds of polled hispanics say they’re barely getting by
42:30 80% of people polled are lending money to family or their community
43:00 Over 90% want to live the American dream
44:30 Optimistic messaging resonates with Latinos rather than doom & gloom
47:00 Would a Latino presidential candidate overperform with Latinos?
48:15 As they’ve become issues voters, Latinos have become more engaged
49:45 Which community attacks your network the most over “bias”?
51:00 Jorge Ramos’s politics became defining for the network for viewers
52:15 The network moved right… to the center, not the right
53:30 Goal is to provide the information and let the audience decide
54:00 Mexico elected a jewish woman in Claudia Scheinbaum
55:15 Biggest constituencies for the network are Mexican, Cuban & Venezuelan
56:15 Have World Cup TV broadcasts in Mexico, and radio rights in U.S.
58:00 70% of soccer games in the U.S. are broadcast on the network
59:30 Hispanics are the swing vote and can’t be ignored

Chuck’s Commentary - Trump Gets A “Deal” While Throwing Himself A Party
1:18:00

Full Episode - Trump Gets A “Deal” While Throwing Himself A Party - Why Hispanics Are Now The Swing Vote In America… And How To Reach Them
2:24:03

Chuck’s Commentary - The Iran Ceasefire Has…Ceased + The Voters You Don’t Hear From Actually Decide American Elections
1:41:03