26/03/2026
People vote for people focused streets! :)
đŁïž 'You can't win elections by challenging the car!'. WRONG! Real leaders do not fear change. They embrace it with courage and curiosity. Our congrats to Dominik Krause, Emmanuel GregĂŽire & GrĂ©gory Doucet!
Parisđ«đ·, Lyonđ«đ· and Munichđ©đȘ. Three different places. One shared story.
For years, there was a quiet warning in urban politics: donât push too hard on reducing cars, donât take away space, donât move faster than people are ready for. And yet â thatâs exactly what these leaders did.
In đ«đ·, Gregory Doucet leaned into the idea that streets could belong to children again. Not just as a slogan, but as something tangible: calmer roads, greener neighborhoods, places where parents donât have to worry every time a child steps outside.
In đ©đȘ, Dominik Krauseâs campaign didnât frame mobility as restriction, but as relief from congestion, from unsafe cycling, from streets that feel like they belong to traffic instead of people.
And in đ«đ·, this election builds directly on the legacy of who spent years reshaping the city, often against fierce resistance, turning riverbanks into public space and traffic lanes into bike paths.
Whatâs striking is not just that these ideas exist. Itâs that people are voting for them.
Because once youâve experienced a quieter street, cleaner air, or a city where a child can cycle safely⊠it stops feeling radical. It starts feeling obvious.
These elections suggest something deeper than a political trend. They show us that changing our streets changes what people believe is possible and what theyâre willing to choose at the ballot box. They show us that the Hill of Hysteria and its pluralistic ignorance are real (see comments for our research on this)!
The story isnât about being âanti-car.â Itâs about being for the human scale in cities. And increasingly, thatâs a story that wins.
(by Lab of Thought)