Joan Moranta, new president of GOB Mallorca
The entity has assured that it will maintain "the firm commitment to the defense of the territory, environmental justice and the ecosocial transformation of Mallorca"
PalmaJoan Moranta has assumed the interim presidency of GOB Mallorca after the resignation of Teresa Cuennet and about ten members of the board of directors, in an internal crisis that has been straining the island's main environmental organization for months. In a statement published this Tuesday, GOB reports that Moranta is provisionally assuming the presidency "with the will to guarantee the continuity of the organization and ongoing projects" while the new internal stage of the collective is redefined.
The crisis became public last Friday during an extraordinary assembly held in Palma, in which Teresa Cuennet and ten more spokespeople resigned due to internal discrepancies with the rest of the management. According to sources present at the assembly, the differences referred to both organizational issues and the entity's operating model, but the resigning members explained in a statement that it was mainly the manners that led them to decide to leave the board.
In the note now released by GOB Mallorca, the organization claims that it will continue working "normally" on the currently open environmental and territorial campaigns, and defends the need to "preserve the entity's cohesion" after months of intense internal wear and tear. The text also thanks the work done by Cuennet and the resigning members and emphasizes that the intention is to "open a new stage of dialogue and internal reconstruction".
Moranta had already become the visible face of the critical sector during the extraordinary assembly of December 2024, the first in more than fifty years of GOB's history with two differentiated candidacies for the presidency. Finally, Teresa Cuennet won with 80 votes against the 37 obtained by Moranta.
That assembly already showed two different visions on the future of GOB. Cuennet advocated for deepening a “more feminist and ecosocial” model, with a less presidentialist and more collective structure. On the contrary, Moranta claimed to “recover local delegations” and strengthen GOB’s own presence “on the street” and in classic territorial struggles.
The handover comes at a particularly significant moment for the Balearic environmental movement, with open debates on mass tourism, urban planning, housing, and territory, and with a series of parliamentary agreements and new regulations that prioritize legalization in rural areas and the reduction of environmental procedures for certain urban developments. GOB insists in the statement that the entity will maintain “a firm commitment to the defense of the territory, environmental justice, and the ecosocial transformation of Mallorca”.