In the political front it's all quiet, except for the President Zapatero choosing a successor, but this is related to the sound defeat of the governing party, PSOE, in the recent autonomic and municipal elections. There are some asking for the removal of the camps, but so far nothing's been done except in Barcelona and Lleida.
The camps are back in Barcelona, keeping a relatively low-profile, making efforts to keep the square clean and safe. There are neighbourhood assemblies gathering in Madrid, Barcelona, and areas of other cities. There's LOTS of talk on the streets, anybody can grab a megaphone and say what's on their mind, and this should be chaotic but it isn't really. The public reacts with hand gestures to the speaker, to signal agreement, disagreement, that they should speak louder, or that they should give their turn to someone else. Lawyers get together to write forms and petitions and to counsel people in case of police actions or on how to avoid being on the wrong side of the law. Some of the manifests are being translated to Braille. There's LOTS of stuff going on. The strangest thing is that there's no particular leader or spokesman, faces and voices change every 2-3 days, and it feels strange and a bit unreal.