Because if something is being discussed briefly, it means that while others are still explaining their numbers, in the Green Party they are already selling the story that here the numbers do add up. Some are already reading it as more than just good accounting: they say it is a political message, one that seeks to instill the idea of order, discipline… and even governability. In the hallways where votes are counted… and also pesos, someone is walking tall. Yes, Yucatán as a platform to look towards the Caribbean. He leaves the powerful National Customs Agency of Mexico, one of the key points in the country's financial management, to land as the delegate of the Secretariat of the Interior in Yucatán. And of course, in times when more than one's hand (or wallet) trembles when it comes to rendering accounts, the data did not go unnoticed. A move that, those in the know say, is not a retirement… but a warm-up. Because from that new trench he would begin to weave his way towards the candidacy for Quintana Roo. And while some are just processing it, others—such as the so-called 'Financial Uncles'—are already following the play in real time. Because in the 4T, positions move… but aspirations always advance. Move with an electoral destination: In politics, office changes are rarely a coincidence… and Rafael Marín Mollinedo's smells more of strategy than routine administration. And in politics, it is known: sometimes a small number can make a lot of noise. It turns out that José Alberto Couttolenc Buentello—yes, 'Pepe' for the buddies—brings a number that many would like: his party, the Mexican Ecologist Green Party, came out 'clean' before the National Electoral Institute in its 2024 report… with observations of just over a thousand pesos. In political circles, they are already reading it this way: it is not a replacement, but a repositioning.
Mexican Political Strategy: Yucatán as a New Platform
In Mexico, the appointment of a new delegate in Yucatán is being discussed, which many see as a political maneuver rather than just an administrative change. The Green Party boasts of a 'clean' report, while political circles see it as preparation for future elections in Quintana Roo.