I am not enthusiastic; Hispanics don't learn English because companies pander to them with Spanish language broadcasting, etc.
Do you believe that American radio stations should not provide any radio programming geared toward ethnic minorities in their native languages because you believe that radio stations should have a mission to force them to learn English??
I wouldn't even label your comment above as conservative, it would be a disservice to some other conservatives who may happen to be a little more tolerant.
Is it too cynical to say that there is something fishy about a station switching to Spanish programming 10 1/2 months before an election that will likely decide whether the illegal aliens get amnesty or are urged to self-deport by the termination of jobs and social welfare benefits?
WTTT as conservative talk never even showed in the 12+ Boston market ratings that I can remember, which means that it was always below a 0.4 share 12+. That meager audience couldn't possibly have had any effect on the outcome of elections in the Boston area. It's debatable even whether full-power highly-rated talk stations have any significant effect on elections either locally or nationally. Most people don't base their decisions on the candidates and the issues on the blather of talk show hosts. WTTT changing format will have no noticeable effect on election results in the Boston area.
Also, I don't get how you connect a station changing to a Spanish religious format with the issue of illegal aliens. Taking the conservative talk show hosts who rail against them off of a station with virtually no ratings won't change anything. I hope you're not trying to imply that any significant portion of the audience for their new format is here illegally.
What is the money story here? Did the station ownership change with the programming? Will broadcasting to a niche (Christian) of a minority (hispanic) audience bring in more money than broadcasting to metro Boston conservatives?Or is this a matter more of ideology than of money?
Salem Broadcasting is an ideologically-driven company. Their ideology is apparently Christianity first, and conservative politics (especially those who also promote Christianity) second.
However, like any company, they don't want to lose money, and conservative talk on WTTT, with virtually no ratings, had to be a big money loser. Their other two stations in the area, WEZE (full-time Christian, better signal) and WROL (mix of Christian and brokered, lots of sponsored programming) probably make money, or at least break even.
Sponsors for conservative talk in the market went to the stations with the better ratings and signals, WRKO and WTKK. It must've been very difficult for WTTT to get any local sponsorships at all, trailing so distantly behind those two major market talkers. The Spanish Christian format will probably get (somewhat) better numbers here and have more sponsors who will support the format, and since it's still Christian, it still fulfills Salem's main ideology.