For those of you that have Netflix, The Barrier, which I finished just a few minutes ago, might be right up your alley.
Most of the story happens in 2045, in an alternate reality where World War III broke out on top of a deadly pandemic in 2020, and Spain became (along with other countries) an oppressive dictatorship.
In the brief glimpse of 2020 we see, a father implants each his young twin daughters with a subcutaneous chip of unknown nature before being taken away from his home by the army.
Twenty-five years later, one of the twins has recently died of the noravirus (the disease that accidentally became covid's fictional counterpart between production and international release), leaving a husband and a daughter (who had inherited her chip) behind. Both of them move to Madrid to join the surviving twin and the twin's mother, claiming that the little girl's mother will be joining them soon at checkpoints. The little girl tests positive for a blood test given to new entrants and is taken away. Her father is told that it's because he's unemployed and that he needs to find a job to get her back. It just so happens that the twin's mother used to date Spain's current Minister of Health, so she calls him to find a job for her son-in-law. During the job interview, it turns out that the house servant job opening is meant for a married couple. To complicate things more, the surving twin has recently killed someone important in self-defense, her boyfriend is taking the steps for the two of them to leave the country as all this is happening, and she hasn't told what happened to anyone else. And, cherry on the cake, the little girl was actually taken to place researching a cure for the noravirus. The place's director is the Minister of Health's wife.
There was sloppy writing here and there (and one who doesn't like too much reliance on coincidences and last-possible-second timing may get tired of it quickly), but it did enough right to want me to see the next episode each time.