Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support | OneFootball

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The Celtic Star

·11 septembre 2025

Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

The mood among the Celtic support is shifting — and not in ways the boardroom at Celtic will find comfortable…

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

From shareholder initiatives to strongly worded statements, from supporter associations to ultras, a broad spectrum of the Celtic support is finding its voice. Celtic’s own statement on Saturday evening, coming just after a ‘Celtic Insider’ briefed the Scottish Sun in an attempt to shift the blame for the transfer window fiasco and subsequent fall-out and the Champions League exit that’s cost the club around £40m, has added to the unrest.

Last night the representatives of the Celtic support came together with the Celtic fan media to discuss the way forward. We have written about this meeting in a few articles earlier today.


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Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

The week before at The Celtic Trust’s recent AGM, there appears to have been a lack of the unity that was on display last night. Two hours of in-fighting, personal accusations, and resignations exposed the weaknesses of a voluntary structure trying to take on a multi-million-pound PLC armed with legal expertise and corporate resources. Sadly, the Trust feels stuck — despite the evident appetite among supporters for meaningful change. Now that could all change.

The Affiliation called out the club’s recurring failure to prepare for Europe

Meanwhile, the Affiliation of Celtic Supporters Clubs (ARCSC) — an organisation representing branches across Scotland, Ireland, England, North America, and beyond since 1986 — released a statement week that could not be ignored. It condemned the club’s lack of ambition, particularly the failure to strengthen the squad before crucial Champions League qualifiers. Echoing the concerns of Brendan Rodgers and Callum McGregor, the Affiliation called out the club’s recurring failure to prepare for Europe and demanded accountability from CEO Michael Nicholson.

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Michael Nicholson, Chief Executive of Celtic FC looks on from the stands prior to the Premiership match between Celtic FC and St Mirren FC at Celtic Park on May 17, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Add to that the Green Brigade publishing their own demands backed by close over 450 –at the last count – other fan organisations podcasts and fan media including the Celtic Star. We’ve also had prominent shareholders encouraging fellow investors to use little-known AGM procedures to press the board directly on purpose, vision, and strategy. The chorus is growing, and it’s coming from all sides.

If there is one theme uniting these interventions, it is frustration. Supporters see a board unwilling or unable to back the manager, modernise governance, or meaningfully engage with those who keep the club alive – the fans.

Continued on the next page…

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

But the challenge has been fragmentation. The Trust has its niche, the ARCSC another. The Green Brigade’s North Curve is powerful in direct action and has now proven it can garner and gather support. Bloggers, podcasts, and fan media amplify voices, but often scatter energy in different directions. The Irish supporters group (AICSC) and the Celtic Supporters Association stepped up brilliantly to the plate at the weekend and the momentum among a united support seems at the moment to be unstoppable. Collectively we know the road we want to go on but what has to be decided is the way we get there.

This brings us back to an idea first raised in 2021

This brings us back to an idea first raised in 2021 by Auldheid, a prominent Celtic supporter and a driving force behind the hard-fought Resolution 12. Persistence beats Resistance was the campaign message for that and it certainly ruffled plenty of feathers at Celtic, the Scottish FA and indeed at UEFA.

His, alongside others, work exposed how Rangers had secured European licences improperly for at least three years, with the complicity of the SFA, and revealed Celtic’s unwillingness to pursue the matter. He also highlighted the folly of Celtic accepting the Five Way Agreement and played a key role in demonstrating that Peter Lawwell had misled the AGM when he claimed never to have seen it.

Without his efforts, much of this would have remained buried, and the wider Celtic support would have been none the wiser. In short, he has first-hand experience of how Celtic operate, and, crucially, how to challenge them successfully. His idea, formed from those experiences, was a professional, properly funded Celtic Membership Scheme.

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Celtic supporters shows their support at full-time following the team’s victory in the Scottish Gas Scottish Cup Semi Final match between St Johnstone and Celtic at Hampden Park on April 20, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

The concept was simple but powerful.

  • A one-member-one-vote structure, accessible to all Celtic supporters, not just shareholders. Monthly subscriptions — as little as £5. More if affordable, less or nothing for the unwaged.
  • Funds used not just for share purchases, but to employ professionals: legal experts, administrators, IT staff, media analysts, and a small management team to oversee operations.
  • A centralised business portal allowing members worldwide to communicate, debate, and contribute their expertise, skills and contacts from their own diverse fields.
  • The ability to hold the PLC to account legally, financially, and in the court of public opinion.
Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Celtic supporters during the Premier Sports Cup Final victory over theRangers at Hampden on 15 December 2024. Photo AJ for The Celtic Star

With let’s say 20,000 members subscribing – and it could become much more – the scheme could become a global force. It could unite disparate groups — the Trust, the North Curve, ARCSC, the CSA, AICSC, The Green Brigade, Bhoys Celtic and most of the fan media and more, alongside ordinary fans who have never felt represented — into a collective too large to be ignored.

It could also attract figureheads, whether business leaders like Duncan Smillie or David Low, now seemingly disillusioned with, and having walked back from, The Celtic Trust, or philanthropists like Willie Haughey. Many will have their own views on others who could help raise the profile of such a scheme.

Continued on the next page…

With credibility, financial backing, and structure, such a scheme could turn frustration into significant and lasting influence.

The timing feels right

The timing feels right. The Celtic Trust on its own has admirable intentions but just doesn’t have the scale. All the supporters group going public with criticisms. The Green Brigade and Bhoys Celtic, supported by fans in their thousands, is sharpening its message. Many supporter groups and individual CSCs have added their voice. Shareholders are being encouraged to use legal avenues to challenge the board.

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Celtic supporters on the road to Hampden. Photo: Vagelis Georgariou (The Celtic Star)

Each of these efforts has value. But together — if harnessed — they could form the backbone of something much more powerful, as was discussed last night. When you think of it the Celtic Trust is the perfect vehicle for handling all matters relating to supporters shareholding – with a huge number of supporter held shares effectively lost. They can assist in finding them and also in purchasing shares for the collective via this plan.

A properly run membership scheme could prevent supporters from being divided, dismissed, or ignored. It could force transparency, recycle stagnant leadership, and open genuine dialogue about Celtic’s future.

Is it time? Can Celtic supporters, scattered across Scotland, Ireland, and the world, finally come together under one banner to professionalise fan power? Could such a scheme take us from chaotic AGMs and angry statements to a sustained, organised challenge to the PLC?

Many believe the chances of the board engaging with the support are non-existent. But look at what Resolution 12 achieved—despite divide-and-conquer tactics, despite issues being kicked down the road, plus a few stabs in the back along the way and concerns acknowledged only to end up in the long grass.

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Cetlic Chief Exectutive Peter Lawwell looks on during the Scottish Cup Final between Celtic and Aberdeen at Hampden Park on May 27, 2017. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Celtic played a long game, but they didn’t anticipate the determination of a handful of individuals battling for so long.

Now, imagine if tens of thousands of supporters pooled their skills, resources, and contacts. You start with communication; if that yields no results, you move to challenge. You play the long game, just as Celtic did with the Resolution 12 shareholders—but this time, the resources will be there to stay the distance, see it through, make it public and keep it there. To meet head-on the stalling tactics.

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As one prominent fan put it back in 2021, “The only way is to communicate directly and open up channels for healthy discussions on the future of the football club.”

That’s where it should start and where it became a stated intention last night. Open communication attempts. But, if necessary, it could go further. And we all know it might well be necessary.

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

Dermot Desmond prior to the Celtic vs St Mirren Cinch Premiership match at Celtic Park on May 20, 2023 (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

At the meeting last night it was repeatedly acknowledged that the Celtic Board don’t work for us but do work for the shareholders, the largest is Dermot Desmond and his quote about hearing a thousand voices making the same point will only make him do the opposite. That’s exactly why we need to have the proper structure in place to challenge the way they are running our club on behalf of the Celtic support.

With the new found unity caused ironically by Celtic itself, the moment for that unified approach may have arrived. It’s a golden opportunity that cannot be missed.

The question now is whether the Celtic support would welcome such a scheme, would subscribe to it, and could it become a unifying force that could challenge the PLC? This article is hopefully a signpost to head us collectively in the right direction.

Image de l'article :Membership Scheme is the way forward for Celtic support

theRangers v Celtic, 31 August 2025. Photo Vagelis Georgariou (The Celtic Star)

A good friend of our editor had this advice to give today.

Re: Last night the Celtic Rebellion officially started, it’s aim is to force change

“You may as well throw excrement* at the moon. As for such as ‘silent protests’, ‘late entry’, ‘early exit’, not attending UEFA games…I despair. That affects the players and manager.

“What’s required is a very small, talented, intelligent group of supporters (as before in the nineties) to be given a mandate to press for change. A camel is a horse designed by a…”

* He didn’t actually use that word.

A collective campaign backed by all participating fan media outlets should be organised to find as many of the last shareholders as possible and direct them to The Celtic Trust.  And if Celtic don’t want to support a fan advisory board then we should simply set one up regardless.

Please share as widely as possible so that we can get this ‘starting point’ message out the Celtic fanbase for discussion.

Niall J

Celtic in the Eighties – Out Now!…

Celtic in the Eighties by the late, great David Potter is out now on Celtic Star Books. Celtic in the Eighties is now available in the Celtic superstore and all other club shops. And don’t forget that you can still purchase your copy directly from Celticstarbooks.com for same day postage.

Order Celtic in the Eighties today, you’ll be glad you did, it’s a fabulous read!

OUT NOW! Celtic in the Eighties by David Potter. Foreword by Danny McGrain. Published on Celtic Star Books. Click on image to order.

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