Mass meeting
In parliamentary law, a mass meeting is a type of deliberative assembly or popular assembly, which in a publicized or selectively distributed notice known as the call of the meeting - has been announced: as called to take appropriate action on a particular problem or toward a particular purpose stated by the meeting's sponsors, and as open to everyone interested in the stated problem or purpose (or to everyone within a specified sector of the population thus interested). == Participants == To the extent that persons in the invited category are clearly identifiable - as, for example, registered voters of a particular political party, or residents of a certain area - only such persons have the right to make motions, to speak, and to vote at the meeting, and none others need be admitted if the sponsors so choose.