The Madrid president steps on Aztec land with a loaded agenda
Isabel Díaz Ayuso landed in Mexico this Sunday for a ten-day tour that is already causing something to talk about. First stop: the Basilica of Guadalupe. There, private mass and offering with his team. The ecclesiastical authorities received it with honors and asked for stronger ties between both countries. Pure symbolism.
But make no mistake: this is not just a devotional journey. Ayuso’s agenda includes meetings with Mexican opposition actors, at a time when relations with the government of Claudia Sheinbaum are more tense than a guitar string. The Madrid leader has been critical of the current administration, and this trip makes it clear.
The political background that no one mentions out loud
The context is explosive. Just when US authorities launch accusations against the governor of Sinaloa, Rubén Rocha Moya, the public debate heats up. Opposition sectors, both local and international, take the issue with a grain of salt. And Ayuso appears in the middle of all this. Chance? I don’t believe it.
Meanwhile, Mexico-Spain relations are trying to rebuild after years of historical and diplomatic friction. Pedro Sánchez seeks an institutional approach, but Ayuso plays in another league: critical, confrontational discourse, without mincing words. Two sides of the same coin.
Officially, the tour seeks to promote economic and cultural ties with Madrid, one of the key partners in America. But the symbolic and political weight is undeniable. At a key moment for the Mexican internal dynamic, Ayuso arrives as a character who does not go unnoticed. This is live political theater, and the curtain just went up.




