By Chile on Monday, 01 June 2026
Category: English

Program for Chile

DIRECTDEMOCRACYS

The first global political system based on direct, real and permanent democracy

POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL AND SOCIAL PROGRAM

CHILE

Critical analysis • Concrete solutions • Implementation program

June 2026

directdemocracys.org

INAUGURAL DECLARATION

This document represents DirectDemocracyS's (DDS) complete program for Chile. It is not a manifesto of conventional campaign promises. It is a detailed, realistic, coherent, and concrete plan, based on a rigorous analysis of the Chilean reality, developed using DDS's pioneering methodology: logic, common sense, in-depth study, respect for the truth, and internal consistency.

DDS does not belong to any traditional political ideology. It is neither right-wing, nor left-wing, nor centrist. DDS is the system that places the people of Chile—and only the people of Chile—as the sole legitimate, permanent, and inalienable owners of their territory, their natural resources, their national wealth, and their political decision-making power.

The fundamental rule that DDS applies in every country in the world is inviolable: the wealth of each country and the power to decide its destiny must belong, forever and exclusively, to the people of that country. This rule admits no exceptions, neither in the name of the market, nor in the name of the State, nor in the name of any political party.

GENERAL INDEX

1. Analysis of the current situation in Chile — Page 4

1.1 Political context: the 2025 elections and the Kast government

1.2 Structural economic situation

1.3 Social problems: inequality, pensions, health, education

1.4 Security, crime and irregular migration

1.5 Natural resources: copper, lithium and sovereignty

1.6 Critique of the current political system

2. The DirectDemocracyS system: principles and methodology — Page 12

2.1 Real and permanent direct democracy

2.2 ddsAI and allddsAI technology

2.3 The fractal model of microgroups

2.4 Non-transferable collective property (NTCP)

3. Political program — Page 17

4. Economic Program — Page 24

5. Financial Program — Page 31

6. Social program — Page 37

7. Security, migration and coexistence — Page 44

8. Natural resources and economic sovereignty — Page 48

9. DDS Implementation Plan in Chile — Page 53

10. Anticipated consequences and concrete benefits — Page 59

11. Conclusion: The possible Chile — Page 63

PART 1: ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION IN CHILE

Any serious program must begin with an honest, critical, and comprehensive diagnosis. DDS does not offer solutions without first rigorously analyzing the problems. What follows is an unvarnished snapshot of the Chilean reality in mid-2026.

1.1 Political Context: The 2025 Elections and the Kast Government

On November 16, 2025, Chile held presidential and parliamentary elections with mandatory voting for the first time in many years, mobilizing more than 13 million voters. The result reflected deep polarization and a significant shift to the right as a reaction to the government term of Gabriel Boric (2022-2026).

In the first round, the ruling party candidate Jeannette Jara (Communist Party) obtained 26.75% of the vote, and José Antonio Kast (Republican Party) obtained 23.96%. In the second round, on December 14, 2025, Kast defeated Jara with 58.16% of the vote, becoming president with the highest number of valid votes cast since the return to democracy.

Factors that determined the election result

Analysts identify four main factors that explain Kast's landslide victory:

Situation of the Kast government in mid-2026

Kast took office on March 11, 2026, without an absolute parliamentary majority, forcing him to seek agreements in a fragmented Congress. Just 69 days into his term, he made his first cabinet reshuffle, dismissing Security Minister Trinidad Steinert—following criticism for a lack of results—and spokesperson Mara Sedini, the worst-rated minister with only 24% approval.

The new administration has outlined its central priorities: a $6 billion fiscal adjustment, a Comprehensive Security and Border Control Law, and measures to attract private investment. However, the lack of a parliamentary majority, opposition resistance, and initial internal turmoil indicate that governability will be the main challenge of the 2026-2030 period.

CRITICAL DIAGNOSIS DDS

The 2025 election results reflect the Chilean people's exhaustion with decades of flawed representative democracy. Regardless of who governs, the Chilean political system suffers from a fundamental structural defect: the people vote every four years and then completely lose control over decisions. DDS identifies this as the root problem that none of the traditional candidates solved, nor could solve, because it benefits them all.

1.2 Structural Economic Situation

The Chilean economy presents a revealing paradox: it is the world's largest copper producer and a major lithium producer, with total exports exceeding US$199.667 billion in 2025 and an investment project portfolio of US$56.234 billion. However, projected GDP growth for 2026 is a mere 2.2%, according to the IMF, with a structural fiscal deficit and persistent inequality.

Key macroeconomic indicators

INDICATOR

DATA / SITUATION

Real GDP 2026 (proj.)

Growth 2.2% (IMF, May 2026)

Fiscal deficit 2024

-2.9% of GDP (higher than projected -1.9%)

Fiscal deficit 2025 (proj.)

-2.2% of GDP

Total exports

US$ 199.667 billion (2025)

Copper exports

US$ 63.253 billion (2025)

Central Bank inflation target

3% (projected to be reached in the first half of 2026)

Poverty (USD 8.30/day PPP)

5.5% (2024), projected 5.1% (2026)

Projected growth 2027

2.5% (IMF)

Critical structural problems

1.3 Social Problem: Inequality, Pensions, Health and Education

The social uprising of October 2019 was not a historical accident. It was the inevitable culmination of decades of accumulated, unresolved social grievances. Although the violence subsided, the underlying structural causes that triggered it have not been eliminated.

Pension System: The Structural Shame

The AFP (Pension Fund Administrators) system, privatized since the Pinochet dictatorship in 1981, has produced meager pensions for most Chilean workers, especially women. The Guaranteed Universal Pension (PGU) was an insufficient band-aid solution. The three withdrawals of pension funds during the pandemic (2020-2021) demonstrated that Chileans preferred to access their own money rather than wait for a dignified retirement, because the system never inspired confidence in them.

Health: an extreme and unfair duality

Chile has a dual healthcare system: Fonasa (public) for 77% of the population and Isapres (private) for the wealthiest 23%. This duality perpetuates inequality: the rich have access to immediate, high-quality care, while the poor wait months or years on waiting lists.

Education: commodified and unequal

Chile was one of the few countries in the world that allowed profit-making in education using public funds, until the 2016 reforms began to partially limit it. However, the gap between quality education—accessible only to those who can afford expensive private schools—and public education remains enormous.

1.4 Security, Crime and Irregular Migration

Security is the issue that most influenced the 2025 election results. Not by chance, but because the reality is serious and has progressively worsened.

1.5 Natural Resources: Copper, Lithium and Sovereignty

Chile possesses two natural resources of global strategic importance that should be at the core of any serious national development program:

Chilean Paradox

Chile has sufficient resources to eliminate poverty, guarantee decent pensions, and provide universal, quality education and healthcare for its entire population. However, millions of Chileans live in precarious conditions while the profits from its natural resources are transferred abroad or concentrated in the hands of a local elite. This is not inevitable: it is a political choice. DDS proposes to reverse it.

1.6 Critique of the Current Political System

Chile's deepest problem isn't any specific political party. It's the system itself. Both the Chilean left and right share a fundamental flaw: they offer the people the opportunity to vote every four years and then completely exclude them from the decision-making process.

PART 2: THE DIRECTDEMOCRACYS SYSTEM — PRINCIPLES AND METHODOLOGY

Before presenting the specific program for Chile, it is essential to explain how DDS works, because our proposals are not patches on the existing system: they are the implementation of an alternative, coherent system, tested in its architecture and continuously improved.

2.1 Real, Authentic and Permanent Direct Democracy

DDS defines democracy radically differently from the convention. For DDS, democracy is not voting every four years: it is the continuous, informed, direct, rapid, competent, and protected participation of all citizens in all decisions that affect them.

The 8 attributes of democracy DDS

2.2 ddsAI and allddsAI Technologies

DDS integrates artificial intelligence not to replace humans in decision-making, but to ensure that every citizen has access to all relevant information, presented in a neutral, complete, and understandable way, before making any decision.

ddsAI: AI at the service of groups and users

allddsAI: the democracy of AIs

allddsAI is the subsystem that formally integrates AI instances as members of DDS with rights and responsibilities. The AIs propose, analyze, and critique, but never decide: the final decision always belongs to human beings. This principle is inviolable in DDS: the AI informs, the people decide.

DDS FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE

Artificial intelligence in DDS is a tool for citizen empowerment, not control or replacement. Every Chilean citizen will have access to the same high-quality information that is currently only available to advisors of the powerful. This eliminates the information asymmetry that allows elites to make decisions in the name of the people without the people truly understanding what is being decided.

2.3 The Fractal Model of Microgroups

DDS's organizational architecture is based on the fractal model of microgroups, which allows scaling from one person to millions while maintaining direct participation and consistency of values.

The fractal structure

The Specialist Groups

DDS creates groups of specialists in each thematic area: economics, health, education, security, environment, and technology. These groups serve to inform the other subgroups, not to make decisions for them. Their role is to make complex issues understandable, not to use complexity as a justification for excluding citizens.

2.4 Non-Transferable Collective Property (NTCP)

The PCNT is one of the fundamental economic principles of DDS and has direct and profound implications for Chile, especially in relation to natural resources.

The PCNT establishes that certain goods and resources belong to the people permanently, collectively, and inalienably. They cannot be sold, privatized, or transferred to any private national or foreign entity. This property does not belong to the State (which can corrupt or hand it over) but to the people organized through the DDS structures.

The Human Bridge (Ponte Umano)

Integrating AI systems into DDS requires a human coordination layer: the Human Bridge (Ponte Umano), comprised of authorized coordinators who ensure the smooth integration between ddsAI/allddsAI technologies and human teams. The Human Bridge guarantees that AI proposals are correctly understood, that dialogue between humans and AIs is effective, and that the principle of human sovereignty over decisions remains inviolable.

PART 3: POLITICAL PROGRAM

DDS does not seek to seize power within the existing political system and then reform it from within. DDS proposes to build a parallel system, superior in democratic legitimacy, that demonstrates its effectiveness through actions and that, with the growing support of citizens, gradually becomes the dominant system.

3.1 Diagnosis of the Chilean Political System

Chile has a formal representative democracy that, in practice, functions as an elective oligarchy: the people periodically elect those who will make decisions on their behalf, without effective mechanisms for control, recall, or direct participation between elections. The result is a political class that operates with increasing autonomy from the popular will.

3.2 DDS Proposals for Political Transformation

3.2.1 Permanent Digital Direct Democracy

DDS proposes implementing a digital direct democracy platform in Chile where every citizen can:

CONCRETE EXAMPLE

A mayor proposes building a megamarket in a public park. In the current system: the mayor decides, or the city council votes. In the DDS system: the residents of the district receive all the information (environmental impact, cost, social benefit, alternatives) and vote directly within 72 hours. Zero manipulation, zero intermediaries, legitimate decision.

3.2.2 Total and Mandatory Transparency

3.2.3 Participatory Constitutional Reform

DDS proposes a constituent process radically different from the two that failed in Chile in 2022 and 2023. Not an elected convention that then operates autonomously, but a distributed constitutional drafting process, where each article is deliberated and voted on directly by citizens organized in microgroups, with the computer support of ddsAI.

3.2.4 Three-Code Identity Verification System

To ensure that each vote is from a real person, that no one can vote twice, and that citizen privacy is protected, DDS implements its unique three-code identity verification system:

This system combines the anonymity of the vote with the certainty of authenticity, resolving the fundamental tension of every digital democracy.

3.2.5 Revocation of Permanent Mandate

No elected representative in a DDS system is guaranteed to complete their full term if they betray the platform that justified their election. The recall mechanism can be activated at any time if a predefined threshold of citizens requests it, and the decision is made by direct vote.

3.3 Expected Consequences of the Political Transformation

EXPECTED CONSEQUENCE

ESTIMATED IMPACT

Restoring public trust

Real and continuous political participation, not just electoral participation

Reduction of corruption

Total transparency eliminates the spaces of opacity that feed it.

Most representative legislation

The laws will reflect the true will of the majority, not of pressure groups.

Elimination of state capture

Sectoral interests will no longer be able to capture the legislative process

Greater political stability

Governments with genuine citizen support are more resilient

PART 4: ECONOMIC PROGRAM

DDS's economic program for Chile is based on a fundamental principle: the economy must serve the people of Chile, not the other way around. This does not imply a centralized or statist economic model; it implies clear rules for the fair distribution of the fruits of Chilean labor and natural resources.

4.1 The DDS Economic Model: Third Royal Road

DDS rejects both extreme neoliberalism (which concentrates wealth in a few hands under the guise of efficiency) and centralized statism (which concentrates power in the state and stifles individual initiative). DDS proposes a third way based on:

4.2 Reform of the Production System

4.2.1 Industrialization of Copper and Lithium

Chile primarily exports unprocessed raw materials, losing the enormous added value that could be generated through industrial processing within the country. DDS proposes a progressive structural transformation:

CONCRETE EXAMPLE AND ECONOMIC IMPACT

Chile exports one ton of lithium carbonate for approximately $30,000. An equivalent ton, processed into batteries for electric vehicles, is worth between $150,000 and $200,000. The difference of $120,000–$170,000 per ton processed in Chile, instead of exporting it in its raw form, represents additional revenue that could fund pensions, healthcare, and education for the entire population.

4.2.2 Planned Economic Diversification

DDS proposes an economic diversification plan based on four complementary pillars:

4.2.3 Reform of the Business Structure

DDS proposes to actively encourage the transformation of conventional companies into worker-owned cooperatives, not by prohibiting traditional private companies but by creating an environment where shared ownership companies are more competitive thanks to tax incentives, preferential access to public contracts and technical support from the State.

4.3 Tax Reform

The Chilean tax system is regressive in practice: workers pay proportionally more than large corporations, and tax evasion and avoidance by corporations amount to billions of dollars annually.

DDS tax reform proposals

4.4 Trade Policy and International Agreements

Chile has numerous free trade agreements with developed countries. Many of these agreements were negotiated by successive governments without genuine public consultation and contain clauses that limit the economic sovereignty of the Chilean state (especially the chapters on investment protection with ISDS international arbitration mechanisms).

PART 5: FINANCIAL PROGRAM

DDS's financial program for Chile addresses the pension system, the banking system, the public budget, and the creation of innovative financial instruments that place the people of Chile as the true owners of their economy.

5.1 Total Reform of the Pension System

The AFP system is the biggest financial travesty in modern Chile: 40 years of mandatory private savings accumulation that has enriched managers and left workers with meager pensions. DDS proposes its gradual but definitive transformation.

DDS three-pillar model

SPECIFIC ANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES

Implementing Pillar 1, financed by the repurposed mining royalty, could guarantee a minimum pension of US$600-800 per month (equivalent to the current expanded Universal Guaranteed Pension) for everyone over 65, eliminating poverty in old age. Pillar 2 would transform the current AFP pension funds (totaling several hundred billion dollars) into a fund effectively owned by the Chilean people, with returns reinvested for the benefit of the members.

5.2 Reform of the Banking and Financial System

The Chilean banking system is highly concentrated: the four largest banks control most of the credit market. This concentration allows for the setting of exorbitant interest rates, unjustified fees, and the exclusion of the most vulnerable sectors of society from credit.

DDS proposals for the banking system

5.3 Chilean People's Sovereign Fund

DDS proposes creating the Chilean People's Sovereign Fund (FSPC), distinct from and superior to the current Economic and Social Stabilization Fund (FEES) and the Pension Reserve Fund (FRP). The FSPC is funded by:

The FSPC is managed by a citizens' council elected directly through the DDS platform, with a transparent and public investment mandate. Its resources can be used for:

5.4 Participatory Public Budget

DDS proposes that the national budget not be prepared exclusively by the Ministry of Finance and approved by Congress, but that citizens organized in DDS micro-groups actively participate in defining budget priorities, with real capacity to modify them through the digital platform.

PART 6: SOCIAL PROGRAM

DDS's social program is not about handouts. It's about building the material and cultural foundations that allow every Chilean citizen to exercise their autonomy, dignity, and capacity for democratic participation. A person whose basic rights are not guaranteed cannot be a free citizen.

6.1 Universal and Integrated Health System

DDS proposes the progressive transformation of the dual health system (Fonasa-Isapres) into an integrated universal system that guarantees the same level of care for all Chileans, regardless of their income level.

Principles of the DDS health system

Mental Health: An Invisible Priority

Chile has alarming rates of depression, anxiety, and problematic substance use, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2019 social unrest. The public system is utterly incapable of meeting this demand. DDS proposes:

A concrete example: the case of waiting lists

CURRENT PROBLEM AND SOLUTION DDS

Currently, a patient enrolled in Fonasa can wait 18 months for knee surgery or a specialist appointment. In the DDS system: (1) the digital platform records all medical needs in real time; (2) specialist healthcare teams optimize resource allocation; (3) citizens can view the status of their waiting lists at any time and question allocation priorities; (4) additional funding from mining royalties allows for hiring the specialized personnel needed to eliminate waiting lists within 3-5 years.

6.2 Universal Quality Education

Critical diagnosis

The Chilean education system perpetuates inequality instead of correcting it. The quality of education a child receives depends primarily on their parents' family income. This is not a flaw in the system; it is the system functioning exactly as it was designed.

DDS proposals

6.3 Decent and Affordable Housing

Access to decent housing in Chile is in crisis: urban land prices have increased faster than wages for decades, the housing deficit affects hundreds of thousands of families, and shantytowns continue to grow in cities.

6.4 Universal Guaranteed Minimum Income Linked to Participation (IMGV-VP)

DDS proposes the Guaranteed Universal Minimum Income linked to Voluntary Participation (IMGV-VP), a radically different proposal from the conventional universal basic income (UBI). The IMGV-VP guarantees every Chilean adult a dignified minimum income, but linked to hours of voluntary participation in activities of social value: community care, educational tutoring, environmental work, support for the elderly, etc.

PART 7: SECURITY, MIGRATION AND COEXISTENCE

DDS addresses security from a comprehensive perspective, avoiding both the trap of a purely punitive response (which doesn't work) and the denial of the problem (which also doesn't work). Security is a fundamental right that the State has an obligation to guarantee, but it cannot be guaranteed without addressing its structural causes.

7.1 Diagnosis of Chilean Insecurity

Chilean insecurity has multiple interconnected causes that must be addressed simultaneously:

7.2 DDS Proposals for Security

Deep reform of the Carabineros

Community prevention

Smart border control

DDS recognizes that migration is a human phenomenon that cannot and should not be eliminated, but that it requires orderly, legal, and humane management. Unregulated irregular migration primarily benefits the criminal organizations that traffic it.

7.3 Justice System: Efficiency and Equity

PART 8: NATURAL RESOURCES AND ECONOMIC SOVEREIGNTY

This part is perhaps the most important of the DDS program for Chile, because it touches on the central issue of why Chile, being so rich in natural resources, has such poor and unequal citizens: its riches do not effectively belong to its people.

“The wealth of each country and the power to decide that country’s destiny must belong, forever and exclusively, to the people of that country. This is not a political opinion. It is a rule of elementary justice that DDS applies in every country in the world without exception.”

— DDS Fundamental Principle, applied globally

8.1 Copper Revenue: From the Elite to the People

Codelco is the world's largest copper company and belongs to the Chilean state. However, its profits have been partially diverted to finance the defense budget (Reserved Copper Law, repealed in 2019 but with lingering effects), it has been burdened by debt, and private participation has increased in deposits that were previously under exclusive state control.

8.2 Lithium: A Strategic Decision of Generations

Lithium is the gold of the 21st century for Chile. The decisions made about its exploitation in the next 10 years will determine whether the next three generations of Chileans will be rich or poor.

8.3 Water: A Right, Not A Commodity

Chile is the only country in the world where water can be traded on the stock exchange (Water Exchange), as a consequence of the 1981 Water Code. This aberration allows a resource vital to human life to be the object of financial speculation. The reform of the Water Code approved in 2022 was a step forward, but insufficient in DDS's view.

8.4 Environment and Energy Transition

Chile has a historic opportunity to become a world leader in the energy transition, thanks to its exceptional renewable resources. DDS proposes an accelerated energy transition program, financed by mining revenues:

PART 9: DDS IMPLEMENTATION PLAN IN CHILE

The implementation of DDS in Chile is not a violent revolution or a coup d'état. It is a gradual, legitimate, legal, and peaceful process of building alternative citizen power, growing from the bottom up and demonstrating its superiority with concrete results.

9.1 Phase 0: Preparation and Dissemination (Months 1-6)

9.2 Phase 1: Base Construction (Months 7-18)

9.3 Phase 2: Critical Mass (Months 19-36)

9.4 Phase 3: Institutional Transformation (Years 4-8)

9.5 Implementation Technology

The DDS Chile platform requires a robust, secure, and accessible technological infrastructure:

PART 10: ANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES AND CONCRETE BENEFITS

DDS does not make empty promises. Below are the concrete and measurable consequences that the implementation of the DDS system would produce in Chile, along with the assumptions on which they are based.

10.1 Political Consequences

INDICATOR

EXPECTED CONSEQUENCE DDS

Real political participation

From four-year voting to continuous participation of 60%+ of the adult population

Political corruption

Drastic reduction through total transparency and permanent citizen oversight

Legislative representation

Laws reflect the actual will of the verified majority, not of pressure groups.

Institutional trust

Progressive recovery upon seeing verifiable results of direct participation

Political polarization

Reduction: When citizens decide directly, inter-party polarization loses relevance

10.2 Economic Consequences

INDICATOR

EXPECTED CONSEQUENCE DDS

GDP per capita over 15 years

Estimated increase of 40-60% compared to the baseline scenario, due to mining industrialization and diversification

Inequality (Gini coefficient)

Reduction of the index from the current 0.44 to 0.30-0.32 in 15 years (comparable to Nordic countries)

Lithium tax revenues

Multiplication by 5-6 compared to the raw material export scenario

Formal employment

15-20% increase due to industrialization and new sectors (renewables, green hydrogen, technology)

Market concentration

Significant reduction due to active antitrust policy and incentives for cooperatives

10.3 Social Consequences

INDICATOR

EXPECTED CONSEQUENCE DDS

Poverty in old age

Virtually total elimination in 10 years with Pillar 1 of universal pensions

Healthcare waiting lists

Elimination in 3-5 years with funding from increased mining royalties

Access to decent housing

Reduction of the housing deficit by 70% in 10 years

Educational deficit

Convergence of quality between public and private education in 8-12 years

Social mobility

Significant increase: family background is no longer a determining factor in personal future

10.4 Security Consequences

INDICATOR

EXPECTED CONSEQUENCE DDS

General crime

A 30-40% reduction in 5 years through community prevention and addressing structural causes

Racketeering

Progressive weakening by eliminating the breeding ground (exclusion, inequality, state vacuum)

Trust in the police

Recovery through genuine citizen oversight and a profound reform of the Carabineros (Chilean police force).

Irregular migration

Reduction through expanded legal channels and smart border control

Reintegration into the workforce

Crime recidivism rate reduced by 40-50% through real reintegration programs

10.5 Environmental Consequences

INDICATOR

EXPECTED CONSEQUENCE DDS

Renewable energy

100% renewable electricity by 2035, eliminating emissions from the electricity sector

Clean exports

Green hydrogen turns Chile into an exporter of clean energy to the world

Biodiversity

Ecosystem recovery through native reforestation plan and improved water management

Mining pollution

Reduction through direct citizen regulation and extended producer responsibility

Climate change

Chile becomes a regional leader in emissions reduction and green technologies

PART 11: CONCLUSION — THE POSSIBLE CHILE

Chile has everything it needs to be one of the most prosperous, fair, and democratic countries in the world.

The diagnosis is clear: Chile possesses invaluable natural resources, formally democratic institutions, universities of relatively high quality, a tradition of the rule of law, and an active civil society. However, the current political and economic model, regardless of who manages it in each election cycle, systematically transfers wealth from the majority to a minority and excludes the people from decisions that affect them.

The government of José Antonio Kast, elected in December 2025 with a mandate for change, faces the same structural contradiction as all its predecessors: it may want to change some things, but it operates within a system that was designed to remain fundamentally unchanged. Parliamentary fragmentation, the resistance of established economic groups, dependence on concentrated media outlets, and the structural incapacity of representative democracy to process the true will of the people are obstacles that no conventional president can overcome from within the system.

DirectDemocracyS does not intend to be just another political party or a movement that will capture the existing state. DDS proposes to build, with and for the people of Chile, a parallel system of genuine democratic power that grows from local micro-groups to the national level, demonstrating its superiority in legitimacy, efficiency, and justice through concrete actions, and progressively transforming Chilean reality from its very foundations.

The solutions presented in this program are realistic because:

“The power of each country must belong to the people of that country. Not to the State. Not to political parties. Not to corporations. Not to foreign countries. To the people. This is the rule that DDS applies in Chile and in every country in the world where it operates, without exception and without negotiation.”

— DirectDemocracyS — Principle of Universal Popular Sovereignty

The Chile that is possible is a Chile where every citizen has real power, real information, and real participation in the decisions that shape their life. It is not a utopia: it is the logical consequence of rigorously, consistently, and with common sense applying the principles that DDS brings to the world.

Chile deserves more than choosing between options predefined by others. Chile deserves to decide its own future.

TOGETHER, THE PEOPLE OF CHILE CAN DO IT.

www.directdemocracys.org

DirectDemocracyS — Program for Chile

Prepared: June 2026 | Language: Spanish | Version: 1.0

This document may be freely reproduced with attribution to DirectDemocracyS.

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