---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mayo Fuster Morell <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, May 26, 2015 at 6:55 AM
Subject: [members] Commons conquer Barcelona! A victory for David over
Goliath
To: P2P Value Members List <[email protected]>


 Dear all! I know Barcelona politics is not the issue of the project, but
in case of your interest I send you below a short reporting of municipal
elections here and the commons conquering Barcelona approached from digital
culture angel. Cheers! Mayo

*Commons conquer Barcelona! A victory for David over Goliath *

Yesterday (May 24th) the candidature “Barcelona in common” won the
municipal elections (the option of 1 of each 4 people voting). “Now
Madrid”- a candidature also connected to commons ethos - became a key force
for the governance of Madrid city. Those are only two of the many surprises
from yesterday municipal and regional elections in Spain. Cities might be
the departing point of a larger political change. Electoral results opened
up an optimist scenario for the attempt to win also the national elections
at the end of this year, or even in a larger run, a South European
coalition against austerity.

Popular Party and Socialist Party remain the main parties, as since the
country transition to democracy in late 70s, but usual politics power
suffered an important blow. *Bipartidism drooping* from 65% at the last
elections 4 years ago to 52% of the nationwide vote. The renewal of power
forces, instead of its change, are also promoted by status quo interests as
by the creation of new parties: the case of “Citizens”, which also emerged
with force as a new political protagonist. Still the irruption of citizens
candidature is impressive for its dimension and its speed. It also favored
the increase of at least 5 points electoral participation.

Only four years after* Indignados / 15M* rise up for "real democracy now"
in opposition to politicians "who don't represent us" and the "dictatorship
of the markets", its impact has become so evident that cannot be any more
denied. The composition of the new candidatures are populated by the social
movement fabric. To give a taste of it, Ada Colau direct action
anti-eviction activist and squatter is going to be the next major of
Barcelona. A joke from history: an activist against housing evictions
"evicts" usual politicians from the city hall. Considering leaders
trajectory, it could also be said that the cycle started with the
anti-Globalization Movement (the background of Colau or Pablo Iglesias,
leader of Podemos/Yes we can), but also succeeded to mobilized once again
the generation that fought to bring back democracy in Spain against Franco
regime (background of Manuela Carmena of “Now Madrid”, a retired judge and
the mos probable next major of Madrid).

>From the *programs*, the first thing to hightlight is the centrality of
urgent plans to rescue citizens suffocating from the austerity policies,
such as with the implementation of several modalities of basic income, and
the revision of public services privatization. An ethical code to regulate
politicians regarding transparency and the abolition of politician
privileges (i.e. limits wages for politicians ($29,000 a year)) and the
commitment to support citizens iniciatives.

A part of its political importance, it is fascinating from an *organizational
perspective*. In less than one year and without connections with political,
economical, judicial and traditional media power, ordinary citizens coming
together have been able to gain important positions in the political
system.  A victory for David over Goliath. Combining among its means crowd
funding, crowdsourced programs, neighbourhood assemblies, and networked
online voting. But also, as in the case of Podemos leader, building on
popularity gained by his own TV program.

How was the song? First we take Barcelona, and then we take Manhattan?
Indeed, some are working for it. There has been a delegation of activist
from NYC visiting Spain <http://www.nyctospain.com/> during the campaign in
order to learn from the experience and "export" such people raising in
their own cities. There are many lessons and insights to extract. I try to
suggest you just a few hoping inspirational to start similar process in
other countries.

*The CC effect* - One of the - mainly young - citizens struggle that
immediately preceded and afterward fed the emergence of the 15M
mobilization was provoked by a reaction to a law promoted by the
Government, repressive of the online sharing and the free culture (Sinde
Law in December 2010). To a large extent this movement of collaborative
cultures on the web reacted like Lessig did in 2008, shifting from
“Creative Commons” to “Change Congress”. It moved from focusing on
sectorial politics connected to intellectual property and Internet
regulation to the understanding that to defend these freedoms it is
necessary to change the political system as a whole. In this move, the free
culture and peer production model became the inspirational organizational
form to organize political protest. I explained in detail that move in
my luncheon
presentation at Berkman center
<https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/luncheon/2011/11/morell> and at this
article
<http://www.onlinecreation.info/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/mfm_freeculturemovement.pdf>.
The Spanish translation of Yochai Benkler's “The Wealth of networks
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wealth_of_Networks>” in this 2015 is not
a coincidence, as a resource to understand those organizational models. In
sum, the sectors holding the expertises around methodologies of co-creation
and to engage with new forms of collaboration supported by online means has
great political potential.

*The Wikipedia “hidden innovation” model* - Even if there are large
organizational innovations, the discourse should be “plain”, or “austere”. Mako
Hill studied why Wikipedia was able to success in 2001
<http://mako.cc/academic/hill-almost_wikipedia-DRAFT.pdf>, and other
attemps to built an online encyclopedia did not. One of its conclusion is
that Wikipedia was the case adopting a more easy to understand concept,
even if being innovative in its method. It held firm on the traditional
notion of an encyclopedia: an idea old few centuries is easy to understand.
Similarly, it could be argue here. The discourse able to raise votes for a
political deep change in Spain is not vanguardist or particularly
innovative, but popular, accessible to everyone, connected to basic needs.
Some point to radical populism reinterpreting Laclau and Mouffe. It is a
“battle” around the common sense, around gaining the hegemony. While, more
vanguardist models, such as new parties connected to “innovative” discourse
and Internet identity, such as Pirate Party or X Party, have been relevant
providing organizational ideas, but did not work out obtaining general
population votes (X Party obtained 0.64 % at last year European elections). In
sum, innovative methods, but popular discourse connected to an agenda of basic
common needs.

*Top and Down *- These organizational processes are neither Top down not
Bottom up, but “Top and Down”. Perhaps, more precisely: “A visually
recognizable top working for a distributed down“. These forces rely on
strong leaders, but also on the raise of a collaborative and free to
operate base. A key concept is “overflow”. It refers to the capacity of
losing control over the process, and to the freedom to operate in the
engagement in the mobilization process. The raising of creativity of
actions of support not under the control of the “parties” seems to be a
relevant aspect for the success of these processes (this is the case of the
movement of graphical liberation
<http://www.movimientodeliberaciongraficadebarcelona.com/> around the
candidatures). Furthermore, there are not clear boundaries about who is
part of the “parties” or who is not, there are not rituals that establish
who is part or who is not, but self activation though participation is the
way to become part of it. Still leaders have strong presence, their face
became one of the key symbols of the process (i.e. the symbol at the voting
ballots is not the candidature logo, but the leader face). Visual symbols
in the visual Internet, where TV though Internet became again a key
channel. Particularly, TV and leadership remains a key channel to engage
with popular sectors of population, that early middle class social
movements adopters of Internet were not able to connect with. Leaders
credibility is built over communication capacity and long social
commitment. Candidatures lead by women - not matter their age - (women
leaders at main cities such as Barcelona, Madrid and Valencia) are better
able to increase vote by transmitting change and having a more democratic
leadership style. As Ada Colau Barcelona next major (and originally
zapatist put it): "lead by obeying people's orders". Leaders positions are
based on power “for“ the base, not “over”. In sum, a visually recognizable
social leadership, but an uncontrolled distributed form of engagement.

Again, these are just three "impressionist" insights from the current
people raising process in Spain. More to come. 2015 is the year of change,
so it will continue. Now, time to celebrate. I left you with the “rumba”
music of the “run run” singed by our next Barcelona major:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wB6NDWKDyKg

Mayo from Barcelona

-- 

  «·´`·.(*·.¸(`·.¸ ¸.·´)¸.·*).·´`·»
«·´¨*·¸¸« Mayo Fuster Morell ».¸.·*¨`·» @Lilaroja
  «·´`·.(¸.·´(¸.·* *·.¸)`·.¸).·´`·»

Faculty Associated. Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Harvard University.
Researcher. Institute of Government and Public Policies. Autonomous
University of Barcelona.
Ph.D European University Institute

Website: http://www.onlinecreation.info
Phone: 0034-648877748







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