Yes! For Poland

The movement especially focuses on empowering and representing small gminas and villages, considered underrepresented under the current Polish system.

[9][10] On 15 December 2021, a unification convention was held in Poznań, whose task was to merge seven local associations and elect a board.

[11] The convention also decided on the program of the new political party, creating a two-fold objective program that was divided into two parts - the consolidation around specific demands and issues on a national basis such as opposition to widespread centralisation, the introduction of Polski Ład, expanded financial budgets for local governments and education reform.

The convention also announced its intention to cooperate with other political parties and consolidate a front against the United Right government, stressing that the opposition required "further elements" to strengthen its platform.

The role of increasing the powers of local governments, cooperation between them, decentralization, support for the idea of civil society, development of education and construction, care for the environment is emphasized.

The achievement of the movement is the White Book, i.e. a set of recommendations and legal changes in connection with the arrival of over 3 million refugees from Ukraine to Poland.

[22] The association's media publish positions on the controversies of public life, eg Print 886, the crisis of the judiciary, inflation.

The postulates concern the economic stability of the local government, its competences in matters of education, health protection and climate.

[23] The party wants to decentralise Poland and build a system based on subsidiarity that would greatly empower the smallest local, municipal and urban-rural governments.

The movement also proposes that counties and provinces be enshrined in the constitution and that the limitation on the number of terms of office for mayors be lifted.

[6] According to the party program, the main goal of the organisation is "a democratic, law-abiding Poland, based on European values, including the principle of subsidiarity, respecting the dignity of every human being, caring for the environment and being an important link in the international community".

[6] At the party convention, the movement made a following declaration: "We want a Poland of self-government and solidarity, in which the people decide the fate of their local communities".