FC United of Manchester: A Cooperative Football Rebellion
Why It Started: The Crisis Moment
In 2005, Manchester United was debt-free and hugely successful when the Glazer family bought it through a leveraged buyout.
This loaded the club with debt, so revenues now paid loans instead of strengthening the team.
Fans felt alienated. The club became a global brand run for profit, far removed from its working-class roots.
Who Built FC United?
- Hardcore Manchester United fans who wanted more than protest.
- Hundreds attended early meetings to explore building a new club.
- Led by organisers like Andy Walsh and John-Paul O'Neill, they laid the foundation for something different.
What They Created
- Founded FC United of Manchester (FCUM) as a Community Benefit Society (CBS).
- A legally recognised UK cooperative model, structured around one member, one vote, no matter how much you contribute.
- Fans directly elect the board, vote on budgets, approve major decisions, and control everything from ticket pricing to sponsorship policies.
Purpose and Values
- Created to walk away from a system driven by debt and private profit.
- FC United is about fan control, democratic governance, and keeping football affordable.
- They reject sponsorships that clash with their ethics. The club has refused offers from betting companies and payday lenders to protect community values.
Scale and Growth
- From the founding in 2005 to opening their own stadium in 2015. Just ten years.
- In 2005 FC United draws 2,000 to 3,000 fans per game, with stable revenues around £1–2 million a year.
- In 2024, they won the Fenix Trophy, a European competition for supporter-owned clubs.
Community Impact and Reinvestment
- No external shareholders, no dividends. Surpluses are reinvested into the club and community.
- Keeps match tickets and memberships affordable.
- Supports youth football, local schools, and volunteer programmes.
- Hosts over 300 community events annually, from dementia cafes to mental health workshops and winter drives like “Big Coat Day”.
How Ownership Is Protected
- The CBS legal structure blocks private takeovers.
- "One member, one vote" prevents anyone from buying control.
- Limits on shareholding and financial returns keep focus on community benefit.
- If the club ever dissolves, its assets must transfer to another community-focused body, never sold off for private gain.
Internal Crisis and How They Recovered
- By 2016, fans accused the board of secrecy and drifting from cooperative values.
- A controversial hire to monitor members’ online comments, despite his own abusive posts, damaged trust.
- Board resignations and on-pitch protests followed, demanding accountability.
The Democratic Reset
- Under heavy member pressure, the board formally called an Emergency General Meeting (EGM).
- Using the club’s own rules, not a hostile power play, members voted in a new 11-person board, elected by over 600 members.
- This restored trust and realigned the club with its founding principles.
Lessons for Future Cooperatives
- Even well-meaning cooperatives can drift if leadership stops being open and honest with members.
- Constitutional safeguards, like the right to call an EGM, are crucial. They allow communities to change course without conflict.
- Real democracy needs participation and a culture prepared to correct itself.
Why This Matters Beyond Football
- FC United is proof that the cooperative model works even in football.
- The same principles you might use for energy, water, or housing (shared ownership, local wealth, democratic control) can protect working-class culture too.
- Shows how to build anti-takeover protections right into founding documents, safeguarding community ownership for the future.