By Israel on Friday, 29 May 2026
Category: English

Program for Israel

DirectDemocracyS

The global direct democracy system

A comprehensive national plan for Israel

Critical analysis of the current situation

Detailed solutions based on logic, common sense, truth and mutual respect

A vision for Israeli-Palestinian unity: one state, federal, free and democratic

directdemocracys.org

2026

Introduction: Who we are and why we are here

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is a new global political system, based on the principles of shared leadership and collective ownership. Each official member holds one share, which is non-transferable and non-purchasable. There is no concentration of power, no dominant leaders, and no manipulation by the wealthy or outsiders.

We approach Israel not as foreigners, not as preachers, and not as those who claim to know better than Israelis what is best for them. We approach it as partners — with tools, with methodology, with global experience — to help the citizens of Israel take into their own hands, directly, fully, continuously, quickly, and securely, the power they deserve as a sovereign people.

Our core principle: The wealth of every nation, and the power to decide the fate of its country, must forever remain in the hands of the people alone—not in the hands of the wealthy, political parties, lobbies, or foreign entities. We apply this principle in every country in the world, without exception.

This document offers:

Part I: Critical Analysis of the Current Situation

1.1 The political crisis: a captive and divided system

Israel enters 2026 with one of the longest periods of political instability in its history. The 25th Knesset, led by Netanyahu's coalition, has become a symbol of particularist politics that does not serve all citizens.

The elections for the 26th Knesset are set for the fall of 2026, but the sword of dissolution hangs over the government at all times: if the 2026 budget is not approved by March 31, the government will automatically dissolve — a law that the government itself violated by submitting the budget two months late.

The upcoming elections will be a referendum on the legacy of October 7: the intelligence failure, the conduct of the war, the evacuation of the hostages, and the exemption of the ultra-Orthodox from military service. These are fundamental moral and political questions that Israeli society has not yet resolved.

The main problems in the current political system:

1.2 The Economic Crisis: Technological Power Alongside Extreme Poverty

The Israeli economy presents two faces: a country with a GDP per capita of about $60,000 (2025), a powerful high-tech sector, and an export-oriented defense industry — alongside mass poverty, food insecurity, and an unsustainable cost of living.

The 2024-2025 data speak for themselves:

Israel is a world-class technological hotbed, but its successive governments have failed to translate that power into widespread prosperity. The neoliberalism of recent decades has created a superstructure of the wealthy and technological elites, while neglecting entire sectors.

1.3 The social crisis: deep division

Israeli society is divided into at least five major identities that are often in competition with each other: secular-liberal Israelis, religious-national Israelis, Haredi, Israeli Arabs (20% of the population), and Mizrahi Jews. A healthy political system would represent all of them; the current system plays on these divisions to its advantage.

The main social problems:

1.4 The Security and Democracy Crisis: October 7 and What Was Revealed

October 7, 2023, was not just a security failure—it was a manifestation of a profound systemic failure. A government that was busy undermining the institutions of democracy missed one of the greatest existential threats. The removal of independent channels of intelligence, public scrutiny, and political discourse—paid a price in blood.

The war in Gaza, Lebanon, and directly against Iran has added war costs of about $80 billion by the end of 2025, removed hundreds of thousands of reservists from their families and the job market, and created unprecedented pressures on the internal Israeli fabric.

However, the military operations in Gaza and Lebanon have demonstrated impressive strategic power; the real democratic question is: Who decides on war and peace? Is it the people — or a narrow coalition of vested interests?

Part II: DDS Solutions — A Comprehensive National Program

2.1 Political reform: true direct democracy

The diagnosis

The current system of government in Israel is a weak representative democracy: the citizen votes once every few years and then loses his power. The parties, the capitalists and the lobby continue to influence every day — the citizen waits for the next round. This is not democracy; it is popular management on behalf of the people.

The DDS solution

DDS offers Israel a transition to true direct democracy — lasting, rapid, competent, and protected:

A concrete example: A decision on a peace agreement is not left to the government alone. On the DDS platform, every citizen receives complete, neutral information, protected from manipulation — and after a structured discussion process in micro-groups — votes directly. The result is binding.

Protection against manipulation

The problem in Israeli democracy today is also an information crisis: funded media, algorithmic social networks, and vested interests that create a distorted reality. DDS platforms operate as a protected space: filtered, verified, and transparent information — no advertising, no lobbying, no brainwashing.

2.2 Economic reform: prosperity that everyone deserves

Fair taxation

Israel is one of the developed countries with the highest inequality. With 10% owning 83% of capital gains, the tax system has failed in its basic role as a balancing mechanism.

DDS Taxation Plan:

Strategic public investment

Israel spends billions on security — but doesn’t invest enough in human capital. DDS proposes a 10-year public investment plan:

The Knowledge Economy: Utilizing High-Tech for the Benefit of All

Israel is the 'startup nation' — but the fruits reach a small percentage. DDS offers:

Social Security

2.3 Educational reform: true equality of opportunity

One of the main problems that the OECD points out: unequal education between Jews and Arabs, and between different sectors. DDS sees education as the most critical sovereign investment.

DDS Education Program:

2.4 Social Reform: Equality, Respect, Inclusion

Israeli Arabs

20% of Israeli citizens are Palestinian citizens — but are represented in 0% of national security decisions, and have been waiting decades for basic infrastructure in their local authorities. DDS offers:

Haredi communities

The Haredim are a large, cohesive society that needs gradual integration — not coercion. DDS offers:

Gender equality

2.5 Environmental Reform: A Green and Sustainable Israel

Part 3: Resolving the Conflict — DDS Vision for Israeli-Palestinian Unity

3.1 What doesn't work: the two big failures

The two dominant approaches have fundamentally failed:

A) The two-state approach: 30 years of attempts have failed. The settlements, the geographical fragmentation, the lack of reciprocity — have made it almost unworkable. We are not saying the intentions were bad; we are saying the results speak for themselves.

b) The approach of a single state under Israeli control: is a denial of basic rights to a large Palestinian population, and is unsustainable from both a democratic and moral perspective.

DDS, consistent with its global principles, supports a third approach: one state, federal, free, and truly democratic.

3.2 DDS Vision: The Israeli-Palestinian Federal State

We believe that Israelis and Palestinians — some of whom already live side by side as citizens of Israel — can build together one state where everyone is protected in their identity, security, and freedom. Not naivety — a different reality and a true commitment.

Characteristics of the Israeli-Palestinian federal state according to the DDS model:

3.3 The Solution Process: Representatives of the Peoples — Not Politicians

DDS offers a unique mechanism for conflict resolution based on a central principle: the representatives appointed to resolve the specific conflict will be directly elected by the affected populations—not by politicians.

Stage 1: Citizens' Committees

Each community—Israeli, Palestinian in the West Bank, Palestinian in Gaza, Arab citizens of Israel—directly elects representatives to the Dialogue Committee. The representatives are obligated to:

Step 2: DDS Platform for Disputes

Every proposal that is formulated in the committees is submitted for direct approval by the representative populations. There is no 'agreement on the population's expectations.' Every major change is approved directly by those who live it.

Step 3: A structured and graded process

  1. Year 1-2: Establishment of an internationally protected ceasefire, mutual release of prisoners, entry of humanitarian aid
  2. Year 2-3: Community dialogue committees are active in each region; DDS platform is activated for discussion
  3. Year 3-5: Drafting a joint constitution with broad citizen participation
  4. Year 5-7: Establishment of first federal institutions; free elections to the common parliament
  5. Year 7-10: A critical essay on shared self-governance and mutual construction

3.4 Resolving religious issues

DDS does not abolish religion — but it does not allow religion to control others. The principle is: complete religious freedom for everyone, without coercion on others.

Part 4: How DDS Implements All This — in Israel, Here and Now

4.1 Joining DDS: Step One

DDS works on a 'proof of concept' basis through local electoral victories. In Israel:

4.2 Implementing ddsAI and allddsAI in Israel

True democracy in the modern era is not possible without reliable and independent information. DDS operates two revolutionary AI systems:

In the Israeli context, ddsAI will be provided in Hebrew and Arabic, will include deep knowledge of Israeli law, the historical context, and will be protected from the influence of a government, party, or wealthy donor.

4.3 Forward: Timeline for Change

2026-2027: Recruitment and establishment

2028-2030: Construction and Leverage

2031-2035: Structural change

Part Five: Expected Results — Israel in 2040

5.1 Israel with DDS: A realistic scenario

Based on DDS' experience in other countries, and on Israeli economic data, we present a realistic scenario — not a utopia, but a measurable change:

5.2 Israel without DDS: Continuation Scenario

We are not threatening — we are describing what the current data shows:

Conclusion: Choosing Israel

Israel is a country with a unique human strength: a nation of survivors, of pioneers, of engineers and doctors and artists and philosophers. A nation that brought democracy out of the desert and built an economy out of nothing. A nation that knows, from extreme experience, what comes when the protection of democratic institutions weakens.

DirectDemocracyS does not come to Israel as having all the answers. It comes with tools, a methodology, and one principle that proves itself in every country where it is tested: When the people—all of them, not just a part of them—directly hold power and information, they make smarter, fairer, and more sustainable decisions than any elite.

Israel's wealth — technological, economic, cultural, human — must remain in the hands of all Israeli citizens. The power to decide Israel's future must be in the hands of all citizens — not in the hands of computer coalitions, not in the hands of wealthy donors, not in the hands of governments that do not represent everyone.

Direct democracy is not a dream — it is the most logical, practical, and just choice.

DirectDemocracyS invites all citizens of Israel — Jews and Muslims, secular and religious, young and old, center and periphery — to be partners in building an Israel in which everyone is equal, everyone is protected, and everyone builds together.

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