How we organise

Communes

Plan C is constituted through communes — our base entity. They are how we organise, and how we commit to one another.

The political communes

Each commune takes on a theme and works autonomously, presenting back to the whole organisation at the monthly Political Assembly. These are live and evolving — new communes form as our struggles do.

Caring Militancy

Putting care at the centre of how we organise — treating social reproduction and our relationships with each other as revolutionary work, not an afterthought to it.

Care workSocial reproductionComradeship

Transnational

Organising beyond borders — internationalist solidarity and learning from movements like the Kurdish freedom movement in Rojava, anticipating the struggles to come.

InternationalismRojava solidarityMovements

Take Back Water / Politics of Refusal

Material struggles against privatised life — from Don't Pay to Take Back Water — building a collective politics of refusal against extraction and the cost of living.

Don't PayTake Back WaterRefusal

Reimagining Anti-Fascism

Anti-fascism that goes beyond reaction. Housing is an anti-fascist issue; climate is an anti-fascist issue; migration is an anti-fascist issue — building a feminist, social anti-fascism.

Feminist anti-fascismHousingClimate

Publications

Theory as a weapon. Producing Guillotines and other writing — collective self-education, analysis of the present, and propositions for new foundations.

GuillotinesPolitical educationAnalysis

How it fits together

Political Communes

Autonomous groups working on a shared political theme. They hold themselves accountable to the General Assembly and include both Members and Friends. They don't have to be geographically based.

Reproduction Groups

Where the work of keeping Plan C running happens — admin, events, comms, membership, mediation. Members-only, so the political communes are free to do the political work.

Local Communes

Comrades meeting face to face in their area — sometimes informal meals and conversation rather than formal meetings — building comradeship against isolation.

Get involved

Find your commune

Join an existing commune, or gather three comrades and start a new one. It begins with becoming part of Plan C.

Get involved