By the time I began to think of the work on the estate as part of what I had elsewhere called the estate left, it was already in danger of sounding too coherent.
The phrase risks abstraction. It suggests a movement, a shared identity, a politics that announces itself. What I had witnessed over several years was none of those things. It was local, uneven, contingent. It had no manifesto and no ambition to scale. And yet, taken seriously, it posed a challenge to dominant ways of understanding both politics and class. Not because it offered solutions, but because it demonstrated capacities that are routinely denied.
The estate left, as I understand it now, is not a political formation in the conventional sense. It is not organised around parties, programmes, or demands. It emerges where abandonment is normalised and survival becomes collective by necessity. It is made up of practices rather than positions: harm reduction, mutual aid, refusal of punishment, informal care, collective problem-solving. These practices are not framed as ideology. They are framed as what you do when no one else is coming.
What the project on this estate made possible was a way of seeing those practices not as stopgaps or failures of governance, but as political intelligence in their own right.
This matters because working-class communities are almost always described in deficit terms. Estates are talked about as problems to be managed, populations to be disciplined, risks to be mitigated. When collective action does emerge, it is often treated as exceptional, driven by charismatic individuals or extraordinary circumstances. The everyday capacity for organisation, care, and adaptation is ignored or pathologised.
What I saw instead was ordinary people building durable responses to structural harm without external validation. They did not wait for permission. They did not seek legitimacy. They did not imagine themselves as representatives of anyone other than their neighbours. And because of that, the work remained accountable to lived conditions rather than abstract ideals.
The estate left becomes visible only when we stop looking for the usual signs of politics.
There were no marches, no slogans, no media campaigns. There were rotas, phone numbers, keys to the hall, shared understandings about when to intervene and when to step back. There was an ethic of presence: being there when needed, withdrawing when not. There was an acceptance of imperfection. Harm was not eradicated. Conflict did not disappear. What changed was the density of response.
This is a form of politics that does not aspire to victory. It aspires to continuity.
One of the most important lessons from the estate was that scale is not always desirable. Much political theory assumes that success means growth, replication, expansion. But growth brings exposure, surveillance, professionalisation. The work on the estate resisted this not out of purism, but out of experience. People knew how quickly attention could become intervention, and how intervention could become control.
Instead, the project prioritised depth over breadth. It invested in relationships rather than reach. It accepted that what worked here might not work elsewhere, and that this was not a weakness. The estate left, in this sense, is not a blueprint. It is a disposition: an orientation toward collective survival shaped by specific conditions.
This is where its political significance lies.
The estate left does not imagine a future freed from harm. It imagines a present in which harm is met with care rather than punishment, with organisation rather than abandonment. It does not seek to replace the state with community, nor does it romanticise self-reliance. It operates in the space left behind when institutions retreat, while refusing to naturalise that retreat.
There is a danger here, of course. Celebrating community capacity can slide easily into justifying neglect. The fact that people can organise does not mean they should have to. The work on the estate was made necessary by austerity, criminalisation, and the systematic withdrawal of support. Its existence is an indictment, not a solution.
And yet, to ignore what was built would be another form of erasure.
The estate left makes visible forms of political agency that do not fit dominant narratives. It shows how working-class politics often takes place in the register of care rather than confrontation, maintenance rather than rupture. It foregrounds skills that are rarely recognised as political: listening, mediating, noticing patterns, redistributing resources quietly.
It also exposes the limits of ideology-first organising. The project did not begin with anarchism, socialism, or abolition. It began with naloxone and the refusal to watch people die. Politics entered later, and only insofar as it helped people make sense of what they were already doing. This inversion matters. It suggests that political education is most effective when it follows practice, not when it precedes it.
For me, this required a rethinking of my own role as a writer and facilitator. I did not bring politics to the estate. I brought language, frameworks, and time. The politics were already there, embedded in action. My task was to recognise them without claiming them, to support without directing, to document without extracting.
The estate left also complicates ideas about leadership. There were no leaders in the conventional sense, but there were people who carried more than others, at least for a time. Leadership emerged situationally and receded when it became burdensome. This fluidity was not always comfortable, but it prevented the ossification that so often kills grassroots projects. Authority was provisional, earned through practice rather than declared.
Crucially, the work did not require ideological agreement. People held contradictory views about drugs, policing, punishment, responsibility. What united them was not belief but commitment: a shared willingness to intervene when harm occurred and to reflect collectively on how to do it better. This allowed the project to hold difference without fragmenting.
In this way, the estate left offers an alternative to the polarised politics that dominate public discourse. It shows how collective action can proceed without consensus, anchored instead in shared stakes. When survival is on the line, purity becomes a luxury few can afford.
The estate also revealed the temporal dimension of working-class politics. Much organising literature focuses on moments of mobilisation-strikes, uprisings, campaigns. The work here unfolded over years, shaped by seasons, life stages, shifting capacities. Time was not an obstacle to be overcome, but a medium to work within. Progress was measured in reduced panic, increased trust, fewer emergencies spiralling out of control.
This is not the time of spectacle. It is the time of staying.
What the estate left makes possible, then, is a different way of thinking about political success. Not as winning, but as enduring. Not as clarity, but as responsiveness. Not as visibility, but as reliability. These are not glamorous metrics, but they are honest ones.
As I step back from the project, what remains with me is not a sense of closure, but of continuity. The work will change shape again. People will leave. New people will arrive. Some practices will fade; others will intensify. That mutability is not a failure. It is the condition of survival under pressure.
The estate left does not promise transformation in the grand sense. It promises something quieter and, perhaps, more difficult: the ongoing work of making life marginally more liveable together. It insists that this work is political, even when it refuses political language. It demands that we take seriously the intelligence embedded in survival.
If there is a broader lesson here, it is not that every estate should do the same thing. It is that working-class communities are already theorising their conditions through action, and that our task-whether as writers, organisers, or researchers-is to learn how to listen without reducing that action to case study or exemplar.
The estate left is not a future to be built. It is a present to be recognised.
And in recognising it, we might begin to imagine forms of politics that are less invested in purity and performance, and more attentive to the slow, collective labour of staying alive together.
This piece was originally posted on Dom’s Substack.