The Mass Occupation + Work Strike will involve millions of people across the United States. We will be young and old, employed and unemployed, parents, farmers, service workers, and laborers. We are Black, Indigenous, Puerto Rican, Latinx, white, etc — the U.S. poor and working masses.
This campaign is rooted in everyday people, not professional activists.
Where the Mass Occupations Will Take Place
Mass occupations will take place across the United States, with a focus on major cities, regional hubs, and strategic sites of political and economic power.
Mass Party is recruiting everyday people to self-organize in their own communities. Local groups will form to recruit participants, coordinate logistics, and prepare their regions for participation in the national campaign.
Who Can Organize
You do not need to be an activist to help organize.
Most people organizing in neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, and community spaces will not come from activist backgrounds. This is intentional. Mass Party will provide shared resources, political guidance, and organizing tools to support local organizing efforts.
What the Mass Occupation + Strike Will Look Like
The Mass Occupation + Work Strike will consist of large-scale, nonviolent occupations where people collectively hold space over extended periods of time.
Participants will:
Establish encampments in public space
Organize shared kitchens and mutual support systems
Live collectively in the streets while refusing to go to work across sectors
Occupations will be strategically located near government centers and major capitalist hubs to concentrate political pressure
What Are the Demands
The central demands of the Mass Occupation + Strike are housing justice, wage justice and international solidarity.
Our demands will include calls for the U.S. government to divest public resources away from war, militarism, and imperial aggression, and redirect those resources toward meeting people’s material needs.
Local communities will shape specific demands based on their conditions — including minimum wage levels, housing costs, and local policies — within this shared national framework. Communities will also participate in shaping how demands related to war, divestment, and international solidarity are articulated as the campaign develops.
18-Month Campaign Timeline
Phase I: Foundation Building (Months 1–6)
Recruit Mass Party members on the basis of struggle and shared political vision
Build relationships with local organizations, small businesses, and community institutions
Consult with experienced organizers and legal observers
Build digital infrastructure and communication systems
Begin fundraising and resource acquisition
Phase II: Mass Recruitment & Preparation (Months 7–12)
Hold People’s Assemblies in neighborhoods, churches, and community spaces
Conduct outreach campaigns to recruit participants for the occupation and work stoppage
Identify preliminary occupation sites and local demands
Train local organizers in logistics, safety, and coordination
Phase III: Final Mobilization (Months 13–18)
Finalize occupation locations and demands
Secure supplies, legal support, and material resources
Coordinate national messaging and communication
Prepare for rapid escalation once the occupation begins
After the Mass Occupation + Strike
Following the occupation, resources, relationships, and political capacity will be channeled into Resistance Lands — spaces where people can continue to live together, plan future mass mobilizations, and grow collective capacity for sustained resistance.
Current & Immediate Next Steps
Recruit members into Mass Party
Present the campaign plan at political, labor, and community gatherings
Produce regular videos explaining the campaign and calling for participation
Develop mass culture and music that speaks to shared material conditions
Publish short political books written by Mass Party founding members — everyday people explaining why they chose to organize