MAM
EU launches democracy campaign across 3,650 European cities
Campaign spans 27 nations with 75,440 OOH panels and Snapchat activations
MUMBAI: Democracy is getting its own media buy and this one comes with billboards, bars, Snapchat filters and even a 20-kilometre run through Brussels. Just ahead of Europe Day on 9 May and the 81st anniversary of the Schuman Declaration, the European Commission has rolled out a sweeping pan-European campaign titled “Protect what matters: democracy”, aimed squarely at younger audiences increasingly growing up amid misinformation, polarisation and platform politics.
Running from 20 April to 21 June 2026, the campaign stretches across more than 3,650 cities in all 27 European Union countries, turning democracy itself into the headline act.
Created by Havas Paris, Havas Play, Havas Media and Prose on Pixels, the campaign focuses on three core democratic pillars free press, academic freedom and free speech framing them not as lofty institutional ideals, but as everyday rights quietly woven into modern European life.
And this is no ordinary civic awareness push.
The Commission is deploying more than 75,440 out-of-home advertising panels across Europe, including a takeover of the Berlaymont building façade in Brussels, home to the European Commission headquarters. Digital activations will run across platforms including Twitch and YouTube, alongside placements on high-traffic websites.
To connect with younger audiences raised on short-form content and filters rather than policy papers, the campaign also includes a Snapchat lens titled “Protectors of Democracy”. The interactive feature encourages users to engage directly with democratic themes and positions citizens themselves as active defenders of Europe’s democratic model.
Offline, the campaign moves from screens to social spaces.
Experiential activations are being staged in partnership with more than 1,000 cinemas and 6,200 bars across Europe, turning everyday hangout spots into venues for civic conversations and community engagement.
Sport also enters the mix. On 31 May, the campaign will host a special “Run for democracy” activation during the 20 km of Brussels event, blending physical participation with symbolic civic mobilisation.
The initiative marks the second chapter of the European Commission’s broader “Protect what matters” narrative developed by agency 365 Sherpas, a communication platform increasingly designed less like government messaging and more like a continent-scale cultural campaign.
Because in 2026, democracy isn’t just fighting for votes. It’s competing for attention too.








