The working together of migrants, undocumented persons and citizens creates a situation where political action is no longer defined purely by a legal status of those who act or by the space in and from which they act. By tracing the moments of coming together, this chapter highlights the possibilities and limitations of appropriating and transgressing a nation- and state-centric understanding of politics, showing that narrations of solidarity might aim at generating alternative spaces for the making of politics. These chapters show the often competing and conflicting discourses that the actors employ, the breaking of solidarity alliances along national, ethnic, and gender lines, and the ways in which dominant discourses are at times strategically used by actors and through that reproduced and sustained. By discussing solidarity initiatives as containing both the potential to challenge hegemonic discourses as well as contradictions and tensions, the chapters highlight the complexities inscribed in solidarity struggles.