In May 2015, the citizen platform Barcelona en Comú (Barcelona in Common) catapulted Ada Colau into power as the city’s first female mayor. Ten months earlier, the group didn’t even exist.
With no money and little experience, just how did they wrest the city from the entrenched political caste that had been running it for the past 40 years? Not surprisingly, Barcelona en Comú has since been inundated with requests for an answer...
— the Guardian
"In response, the group produced a step-by-step explanation – How to Win Back the City en Comú"
Barcelona en Comú is a citizen platform launched in 2014 that is the minority government in power right now in Barcelona. Many of its members participated in the 15M movement and come from political organizing backgrounds, and the organization has ties to Podemos.
The full title of the guide, which is available as a pdf here, is How to win back the city en comú: guide to building a citizen municipal platform.
"For us, 'winning back the city' is about much more than winning the local elections," they write. "It means putting a new, transparent and participatory model of local government, which is under citizen control, into practice."
The guide describes how to create such a platform, from pre-launch organization to winning an election. It explicates financing models and electoral structuring.
A scant 10 pages, the guide is accessible and well-designed. Spain has recently witnessed a bit of a trend with leftist parties publishing super accessible guides. A few weeks ago, Podemos released an election guide styled after an Ikea catalogue.
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