The decision to grant asylum to Evo Morales provoked Twitter hashtags #BienvenidoEvo and #EvoElMundoEstaContigo among supporters in Mexico, while opponents tweeted #EvoNoEresBienvenidoEnMexico. Mexico City Mayor
Claudia Sheinbaum welcomed Morales, tweeting "Mexico is an inclusive and supportive nation, whose doors open to those who have had the need to leave their countries" while conservatives such as former president
Vicente Fox and 2018 presidential candidate
Margarita Zavala criticized the decision to grant asylum to Morales. The media have also been split on the decision. Following the expulsion of ambassador
María Teresa Mercado, former Mexican president
Felipe Calderón tweeted "The conflict with Bolivia has gone too far. I worry about the lack of traditional impartiality of the Mexican diplomatic corps".
Senator Citlalli Hernández (
Morena) and
Deputy Mario Martín Delgado (
Morena) expressed their support for ambassador Mercado. Speaking on behalf of the Party of the Democratic Revolution,
Ángel Ávila said Mexico should expel Bolivian diplomats.
Marko Antonio Cortés Mendoza, president of
PAN, said the conflict is the result of an "improvised and inconsistent" foreign policy. On 30 December 2019, the Spanish government said it "flatly rejects" the Bolivian suggestion that it has interfered in Bolivia's internal affairs and calls the decision to expel three diplomats a "hostile gesture." In reciprocity, they gave three Bolivian diplomats 72 hours to leave Spain. The three diplomats being expelled by Spain, hired under the Morales administration, were identified as the
chargé d'affaires, Luis Quispe Condori, the military attache, Marcelo Vargas Barral and the police attache, Orso Fernando Oblitas Siles. The MAS heads of the Senate and Chamber of Deputies,
Mónica Eva Copa and
Sergio Choque, have also been critical of the handling of the situation, with Copa characterising the decision of Áñez as "unfortunate", because Spain helped to pacify the country after Morales resigned. "We hope that Áñez can rethink her position," said Copa, "this position only causes damage to the country." On 31 December, the
European Union expressed a desire for the situation to be deescalated as soon as possible and said that "the expulsion of diplomatic officials is an extreme and unfriendly measure that must be reserved for serious situations. Full respect for the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and dialogue are essential to reduce tension." On 1 January, the Bolivian government promised to supply more information about the incident, stating that "Bolivia wishes to overcome this impasse as soon as possible and maintain close relations with the Kingdom of Spain, within the framework of traditional respect and friendship that have always characterized them." The expulsions do not extend beyond those designated
personae non gratae and Mexico named Ana Luisa Vallejo as Mercado's replacement. The Bolivian diplomats will similarly be replaced with the role of chargé d'affaires being filled by Gualberto Rodríguez San Martín. On 2 January, Bolivia's interim foreign minister,
Karen Longaric said she hoped to meet with her Mexican counterpart,
Marcelo Ebrard, in a neutral country to solve the conflict. At the same time, she insisted that the asylees, particularly Juan Ramón Quintana, be turned over to the Bolivian government. Meanwhile,
Vox, a Spanish right-wing party, is investigating ties between
Pablo Iglesias, the leftist leader of
Podemos, and the government of former Bolivian president Evo Morales, as well as the current conflict involving Spanish diplomats. Their representatives, headed by MEP
Hermann Tertsch, met with interior minister
Arturo Murillo and defence minister
Fernando López to review evidence of payments between members of the Morales administration and Podemos. Tertsch made a statement asking that Mexico reconsider its position on the asylees as Quintana is one of those heavily implicated as being involved. At the petition of the government of President
Luis Arce, María Teresa Mercado, who was the Mexican ambassador to Bolivia at the time of the incident, was reappointed ambassador of Mexico to Bolivia on January 28, 2021. ==See also==