“We ask for dignity, justice and common sense.” With this phrase, included in the manifesto read this Sunday, the claim that articulated the November 30 march in Ibiza was synthesized. In the interventions, the voices of freelancers and organizers coincided in pointing out the urgent need to adapt the system to the reality of those who are self-employed, a collective that claims to sustain entire sectors of the local economy while continuing to operate without a sufficient safety net. “Today Ibiza spoke loud and clear. The response has been impressive. Streets full, hands up and a common message: enough of suffocating us,” described Alicia Reina, one of the movement’s coordinators.
Claims focused on fair dues and tax relief
The focus of the claims revolved around fees and tax pressure. The manifesto denounced the fact that many professionals are forced to pay even in months without income and demanded
Social protection and conciliation as urgent demands
The participants recalled that the lack of protection in situations of illness, maternity or bereavement continues to be one of the main reasons for vulnerability in the sector. The manifesto called for an
Less bureaucracy and protection of family housing
Excessive paperwork and penalties for administrative errors were another of the points that were widely repeated during the day. The platform called for
A movement that does not end with the march
The general atmosphere of the day combined demands and continuity. For the organizers, 30N is not a closing, but the beginning of a broader phase of mobilization that seeks to transfer these demands to the administrations. Reina summed it up as follows: “Today was not an end, it was the beginning. We will continue to mobilize until they listen to us.”
The protest in Ibiza comes after weeks of public exposure of testimonies of self-employed and after the plenary of the Consell Insular approved a motion in support of the group, warning of the effects of insularity, seasonality and cost overruns on those who are self-employed.









