Reclaim the streets
If public spaces are privately owned, where can we protest?
Rachael Jolley
In 1963, crowds took to the streets of Bristol to protest against a “colour bar” that prevented the employment of non-white drivers and conductors on city buses. The protests were part of the Bristol bus boycott, a campaign that ended with the bus company taking on its first black and Asian conductors.
Today, those protesters could find their path across Bristol blocked because a private company, not elected representatives, run the central squares, and decide who is allowed to access them. Marches and demonstrations can now be stopped at a whim, and without a backward glance at history, after the city’s council signed a 250-year management lease with the Bristol Alliance for the central shopping district Cabot Circus, and failed to quibble about protecting democratic rights.