When the “American dream” becomes an administrative nightmare
Ah, international diplomacy: that game of take those visas away from me over there where the rules are set by whoever has the biggest deck. This time, the protagonist of our binational drama is Marina del Pilar Ávila, the governor of Baja California (yes, the one from Morena), who has just joined the exclusive club of “people whose golden pass was revoked by the US.”. The reason? Mystery. The explanation? Zero. The drama? Full.
The “family pack” that no one asked for
Because it’s not just her: her husband, Carlos Torres (aka “the public spaces coordinator who will no longer coordinate anything on the other side of the wall”), also received his consular notification of rejection. The governor, with that calm that only comes from not having to wait in line at the consulate, said “I trust it will be clarified” so generic that it even seems copied from a crisis manual. Of course, he made it clear that his support for Carlos is “moral and political” (translation: “if you fall, I will cling to the position like a koala to a tree”).
The curious thing is that this family has more connections with the US than an influencer with Amazon Prime: their baby was born in California (50 km from Mexicali, because crossing to buy at Target does not count as tourism) and their eldest daughter is also “made in the USA”. Ironic that now they cancel their VIP pass.
The uncomfortable precedent (and the PAN doing its thing)
This is not the first time this has happened to a Baja Californian politician: in 2009, the former mayor of Tijuana Jorge Hank Rhon (yes, the one with the casinos and the tigers) was also given the immigration revoke. Coincidence? Pattern? Bad luck? Who knows, but the PAN and MC are already popping out popcorn to demand explanations, because “binational dialogue is important” (and what better excuse to zoom in on a scandal).
The funny thing is that the official statement talks about a “complex binational context”… that is, the diplomatic version of “we don’t even understand, but it sounds good”. Is it because of the water from the Colorado River? Through the wall? Or because someone in Washington saw his old tweets? The world will never know.
Moral: In politics, like on Tinder, a “match” with the US can disappear for no reason. And when they take away your visa, even “it’s complicated” sounds like a cheap excuse.
Are you surprised by this little diplomatic game? Share this note and tag someone who “will cross the bridge this weekend”. If you want more soap opera-flavored political stories, check out our related content. #VisaRevoked #BajaGate




