DirectDemocracyS
Global Future Political Organization
POLITICAL PROGRAM FOR POLAND
Reality Analysis · Critique of the Current System · Comprehensive Solutions
Based on logic, common sense, science, reality, truth, consistency and mutual respect
Version 1.0 - May 2026
public.directdemocracys.org
INTRODUCTION: WHY POLAND NEEDS REAL CHANGE
Poland stands at a crossroads. On the one hand, the country is experiencing impressive economic growth, is a member of NATO and the European Union, has a vibrant job market, and increasingly high living standards. On the other, these statistics conceal deep-rooted structural problems that ordinary citizens experience daily: rising housing prices, overcrowded hospitals, polluted air, an aging population, the emigration of younger generations, and—above all—a sense that true power does not reside with the people.
DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is not another political party that promises everything and delivers nothing. We are a global political organization based on direct democracy, shared ownership, accountable leadership, and artificial intelligence technologies (ddsAI / allddsAI) that serve only the citizen—not the elites. Our model, applied to Poland, means that the country's wealth, natural resources, institutions, and decision-making power remain forever and exclusively in the hands of the Polish people.
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The fundamental principle of the DDS for Poland: no foreign company, no oligarch, no party elite, and no foreign institution can decide the fate of Poles. Economic and political sovereignty is a right—not a privilege. |
This program analyzes the real situation in Poland after the 2025 presidential elections, identifies key structural problems and offers concrete, realistic and detailed solutions – combined with the implementation of the DirectDemocracyS system, which will give every Pole a real, permanent, competent and protected influence on decisions affecting their country.
PART I: DIAGNOSIS - THE ACTUAL SITUATION OF POLAND IN 2026
1. Political crisis: cohabitation and the blocking of reforms
Following the May-June 2025 presidential elections, Poland found itself in a situation of sharp power division. Karol Nawrocki, the candidate supported by the right-wing nationalist Law and Justice (PiS), won the second round of the presidential election with 50.89% of the vote, defeating Rafał Trzaskowski, the candidate of the ruling center. Prime Minister Donald Tusk and his coalition control the Sejm, but the president wields a legislative veto that can paralyze any reform.
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Prime Ministers and the government |
KO (Tusk) coalition — center-left |
President of the Republic of Poland |
Nawrocki (PiS) — conservative-nationalist |
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Polls (December 2025) |
KO 35.3% · PiS 31.2% · KKP 11.2% |
Government assessment |
47.2% of Poles have a negative opinion of the government (CBOS, May 2025) |
This result creates a structural trap: the government cannot govern effectively because the president blocks reforms with frequent vetoes. The public is disillusioned—over 20% of the ruling coalition's voters declare disappointment with its performance. Polish politics oscillates between institutional conflict and populism.
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DDS Diagnosis: None of the major Polish political blocs addresses the fundamental problem—real power does not reside with the citizens. The left and right wing squabble over power among themselves, leaving the average Pole a passive observer. Indirect democracy (through party representatives) is, by definition, imperfect and susceptible to corruption, manipulation, and corporate lobbying. |
1.1 Specific problems of the party system
- The cohabitation of the political system blocks reforms throughout the entire term of office - President Nawrocki already uses vetoes more often than his predecessors
- Parties are financed from public funds, but they represent the interests of narrow elites, sponsors and pressure groups.
- Election programs are selectively implemented - campaign promises disappear after gaining power
- Lack of mechanisms for dismissing ineffective politicians before the end of their term
- The judiciary is entangled in politics - the dispute over the Constitutional Tribunal and the Supreme Court has been going on for years, weakening trust in the institutions
- Mainstream media (public and private) serve the interests of parties and owners, not the citizens
2. Demographic crisis: a slow disaster
Poland is facing one of the most serious demographic crises in Europe. The data for 2025 is alarming: Poland's population will reach 37.33 million—157,000 fewer than a year earlier. This represents an acceleration of the negative trend that has been ongoing since 2012, when Poland had 38.53 million citizens.
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Fertility rate |
1.2 children/woman (one of the lowest in the EU) |
Median age |
42 years (2025) → 52 years (2050 forecast) |
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Participation of seniors |
24.2% above retirement age |
Net emigration |
Intensified, especially among educated youth |
According to a GUS (Central Statistical Office) simulation, if current trends continue, Poland could shrink to 29.4 million inhabitants by 2060. This has dramatic consequences for the pension system, healthcare, armed forces, and economic potential. Emigration—especially of educated young Poles—intensifies the brain drain, depriving the country of skills essential for modernization.
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DDS Diagnosis: The current Polish government lacks any effective, long-term demographic plan. Meanwhile, DDS proposes solutions that will stop emigration and encourage Poles to return—because Poland, with its true democracy, economic justice, and prospects, is becoming a country where people WANT to stay and build. |
3. Health crisis: the National Health Fund on the brink of collapse
The Polish healthcare system is teetering on the brink of financial and organizational collapse. The National Health Fund (NFZ)—the system's sole public payer—is experiencing dramatic deficits. According to official data, the NFZ deficit reached approximately PLN 14 billion in 2025, and forecasts for 2026 indicate a gap of PLN 23 billion. The scenario for 2028—a deficit of PLN 90 billion—is downright catastrophic.
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Doctors per 1000 inhabitants |
3.5 (vs. EU average 4.2) |
Nurses per 1,000 inhabitants |
5.7 (vs. EU average 8.4) |
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National Health Fund deficit 2025 |
~14 billion PLN |
2028 deficit forecast |
up to PLN 90 billion |
The impact of these shortages is palpable: waiting lists for specialists stretch for months, availability of diagnostics is declining, and hospitals are limiting services due to underfunding. Medical staff are overworked and underpaid, with the emigration of doctors and nurses to Western Europe exacerbating the problem.
4. Housing Crisis: Home as a Luxury
Poland is grappling with a housing shortage estimated at nearly 2 million units. Property prices and rents have risen in recent years at one of the fastest rates in Europe. Over 90% of Polish households consider housing costs a significant burden—a trend that has persisted since 2010. The public housing stock has shrunk significantly in recent decades.
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Three groups are particularly hard hit: young families who cannot buy or rent affordable housing; seniors who have to choose between food and medicine; and Ukrainian refugees who have concentrated in large cities, driving up rents. |
5. Fiscal Crisis: Debt That Grows
Poland's public finance deficit reached 7.3% of GDP in 2025—the second-highest in Europe, despite the output gap being almost closed. If current trends continue, public debt could reach 78% of GDP by 2031, significantly exceeding the EU's 60% benchmark. Broad spending increases (defense, social benefits, public sector wages) are not offset by revenue growth.
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Fiscal deficit 2025 |
7.3% of GDP |
Debt Forecast 2031 |
78% of GDP (vs. EU limit: 60%) |
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GDP growth 2025 |
3.6% |
Inflation 2025 |
4.3% (peak) |
The Polish economy is growing, but it rests on structurally unsustainable public finances. The high dependence on exports to Germany (27.8% of exports) means that an economic slowdown in Germany—realistic in 2025-2026 amid global trade turbulence—will severely impact Polish industrial production.
6. Social crisis: poverty, inequality, disinformation
Despite GDP growth, approximately 2 million Poles lived in extreme poverty in 2024. Over a million people are too poor to receive social assistance but too poor to live a decent life—the so-called "gray zone of poverty." Seniors are the most vulnerable group: they often choose between medication and food. According to the Central Statistical Office, 16.3% of Poles are at risk of poverty or social exclusion (2023).
At the same time, the threat of disinformation is growing. Poland is intensely bombarded with Russian disinformation (due to its strategic location), and social media—dominated by algorithms that promote engagement, not truth—fuel polarization. Political parties exploit this phenomenon to emotionally mobilize their voters, instead of focusing on solving real problems.
7. Energy and climate crisis
Poland remains one of the most coal-dependent EU countries. Electricity prices are rising, and the planned implementation of the EU ETS2 (carbon tax) system in 2027 will disproportionately impact the poorest households. Simulations indicate that the energy poverty rate will increase by 1.5 percentage points by 2032. Investments in nuclear energy and renewable energy are planned but are proceeding too slowly.
PART II: DDS PROGRAM FOR POLAND – SPECIFIC SOLUTIONS
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DDS's fundamental principle: Every program proposal is created, voted on, implemented, and monitored BY citizens—with the help of DDS specialist groups and ddsAI/allddsAI technologies—and not BY them without their consent. Poles decide about Poland. |
PILLAR I: TRUE DEMOCRACY - DDS SYSTEM FOR POLAND
The fundamental problem of the Polish political system is that formal power belongs to the nation, but in practice it belongs to parties, party elites, donors, and pressure groups. DDS proposes building a parallel, and ultimately substitute, system of direct democracy in Poland, based on micro-group structures, AI technologies, and the principle of collective ownership.
1.1 The structure of DDS microgroups in Poland
The foundation of the DDS organization is a fractal structure of microgroups. Each DDS microgroup consists of five full members + one coordinator. Groups aggregate into structures ranging from 25 to 125 to 625 to higher. Every decision is voted on first at the microgroup level and then aggregated to higher levels. No level can impose decisions on lower levels—the flow is bottom-up.
- Each Polish commune organizes local DDS micro-groups around real problems: infrastructure, health, education, safety, environment
- Specialized micro-groups (doctors, lawyers, economists, engineers) support decisions with substantive knowledge - every vote is informed, not emotional
- All decisions and votes are transparent, publicly verifiable and protected from manipulation on DDS platforms
- Three-factor ID verification ensures only one real human votes – no fake accounts or bots
1.2 ddsAI and allddsAI: AI in the service of the Polish citizen
In the hands of DDS, AI technology is a citizen tool—not a tool of control. The ddsAI system informs citizens on every political issue in a neutral, comprehensive, non-manipulative manner, and independent of partisan or corporate interests. The allddsAI system integrates AI opinions as full participants in the debate, providing independent analysis and fact-checking.
- ddsAI analyzes every draft law, every budget, every tender and every public decision – providing Polish citizens with full, understandable and reliable information in their own language
- allddsAI detects disinformation, media manipulation, and propaganda — protecting citizens from so-called brainwashing
- The DDS platform runs on its own, protected servers - it is not dependent on the algorithms of Facebook, Google or other corporations that monetize users' attention
- All citizen data is the property of the citizens - DDS does not sell data and does not work with advertisers
1.3 Specific mechanisms of direct democracy
- Initiative referendum: 1% of eligible citizens can initiate a referendum on any public issue within 90 days
- Recall: Any elected representative may be recalled by at least 35% of eligible voters in his or her district at any time
- Participatory budget: at least 20% of the budget of each local government unit is allocated directly by citizens through the DDS platform
- Citizens' legislation: bills submitted by citizen micro-groups and supported by an appropriate percentage of voters must be voted on in the Sejm within 120 days
- Transparency Score: Every politician, office and public institution has a publicly available transparency score, updated in real time by ddsAI
PILLAR II: ECONOMY - THE WEALTH OF POLAND FOR POLES
DDS recognizes the free market as an effective mechanism for allocating resources across many sectors—but opposes the privatization of public goods, natural resources, and critical infrastructure. Wealth generated from resources belonging to the Polish nation must return to the Polish nation. Detailed proposals are below.
2.1 Economic Sovereignty: Natural Resources
Poland has significant natural resources: coal deposits (in the phase of managed phase-out), copper (KGHM), natural gas, agricultural land, and digital space. DDS offers:
- Constitutionalization of the principle: all natural resources, agricultural land and critical infrastructure (power grids, water supply, telecommunications) are the inviolable property of the Polish nation - they cannot be privatized without a referendum with 75% support
- National Wealth Fund: 30% of the profit from all natural resources goes to the National Wealth Fund, managed by citizens through the DDS platform, investing in energy transition, health and education – modelled on the Norwegian State Fund
- KGHM and other strategic companies remain in the hands of the Polish state and citizens. No sale of strategic shares to foreign entities without a double referendum.
- Windfall profit tax: sectors using public goods (banks, energy, telecommunications) pay a progressive tax on profits exceeding a 15% margin – the funds go to the civic budget
2.2 Fiscal restructuring without cutting public services
A fiscal deficit of 7.3% of GDP (2025) requires action—but DDS opposes cuts that hit the most vulnerable. The solution: broaden the tax base, tighten the system, and eliminate corruption.
- Digitalization of tax administration: AI audits 100% of transactions above PLN 10,000 in real time - eliminating the gray tax zone estimated at 15-20% of GDP could bring an additional PLN 80-100 billion per year
- Extraordinary wealth tax: annual fee of 0.5% on net wealth above PLN 5 million, 1% above PLN 20 million - estimated income: PLN 15-25 billion per year
- Eliminating corporate tax optimization: closing tax loopholes used by foreign corporations; mandatory country-by-country reporting for every company with a turnover above PLN 50 million
- Tax law simplification: 60% reduction in the number of tax regulations – fewer regulations mean fewer opportunities for evasion and lower compliance costs for SMEs
- Transparent public procurement: all public tenders above PLN 500,000 go through the DDS platform with full documentation, anonymized bid evaluation and an AI system to detect bid rigging
2.3 Support for small and medium-sized enterprises
SMEs constitute the backbone of the Polish economy, employing over 70% of the private sector workforce. DDS focuses on strengthening them, not favoring corporations.
- Zero bureaucracy for companies with up to 10 employees for the first 3 years of operation – registration, reporting and payments via one digital platform
- DDS Local Fund: each commune has a loan fund (interest rate 1-2%) for local SMEs, financed by the National Wealth Fund
- Worker cooperatives: preferential tax treatment for companies transitioning to a cooperative or worker-owned model – employees become co-owners, which increases productivity and loyalty
- Domestic digital platforms: DDS is building Polish alternatives to e-commerce and delivery platforms (equivalents of Allegro, Glovo) managed collectively, where the commission does not exceed 5% (vs. 15-30% for private giants) and returns to the local ecosystem
2.4 Energy transition: energy independence
Poland must become independent from energy imports while simultaneously implementing a just coal transition. DDS proposes a 15-year plan:
- Phase 1 (2026-2030): Massive renewable energy installations – solar panels on every public building, offshore wind farms in the Baltic Sea with mandatory participation of Polish consortia; target: 50% of energy from renewable energy by 2030
- Phase 2 (2028-2035): First SMR (Small Modular Reactors) units – Poland as a European leader in next-generation nuclear energy; goal: 3 SMR reactors by 2035 with Polish participation in the technology
- Phase 3 (2030-2040): Full decarbonisation of the energy sector; professional transformation for 80,000 miners – retraining programme financed by the ETS and the National Wealth Fund
- Community energy cooperatives: Any municipality can establish a local energy cooperative – prosumers sell surplus energy to the grid at a fair price, lowering bills for all residents
- Social energy tariff: free basic electricity allocation (200 kWh/month) for the 20% of poorest households – financed by a tax on windfall profits from the energy sector
PILLAR III: HEALTH - HEALTH CARE AS A RIGHT, NOT A COMMODITY
3.1 Healthcare financing reform
The single-payer National Health Fund (NFZ) is structurally vulnerable to financial collapse. DDS proposes a hybrid model that maintains universal access while diversifying funding:
- NFZ Plus: NFZ funding from the National Wealth Fund and the windfall tax - additional PLN 30-40 billion per year without increasing employee contributions
- Regionalisation of health budgets: 16 voivodeships manage their own health budgets with a guarantee of a minimum national standard – regions can test innovative financing models
- Transparent queue register: the DDS platform shows in real time the waiting time for each procedure in every hospital in Poland - the citizen chooses, the system allocates efficiently
- Private supplementary insurance: tax incentives for employees who buy supplementary insurance – reducing the burden on the public system without privatizing primary care
3.2 Fighting against staff shortages
- Loan agreement: Doctors and nurses who work for 5 years in an understaffed facility (primarily outside large cities) receive student debt relief and preferential housing conditions
- Fast track recognition of qualifications for Polish doctors working abroad who want to return - a simplified procedure in 30 days
- Telemedicine as standard: ddsAI platform provides initial AI diagnostics and instant online doctor consultation for 30% of outpatient visits – relieving pressure on offices and shortening queues
- Raising salaries in healthcare: the remuneration of doctors and nurses must remain at least 200% of the national average; financed by the National Health Fund Plus
3.3 Preventive medicine and public health
- Preventive screening program: universal, free screening for key diseases (cancer, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes) for 100% of the population in appropriate age groups - detecting the disease earlier costs 10x less than treating advanced disease
- Mental health: expansion of the psychiatric and psychological network – 1 school psychologist for every 250 students; free short-term therapy (up to 20 sessions) financed by the National Health Fund for every citizen
- Reducing air pollution: Poland has some of the worst air quality indices in the EU - DDS proposes a ban on the installation of new coal-fired boilers from 2027 and a program to replace 3 million old boilers over 10 years, financed by the National Wealth Fund
PILLAR IV: HOUSING - A HOME FOR EVERY POLE
4.1 DDS National Housing Program
The 2 million-unit housing shortage requires systemic intervention—not more mortgage subsidies that inflate prices. DDS proposes:
- Social Housing Fund: construction of 500,000 municipal and social housing units over 10 years – financed by the National Wealth Fund and municipal bonds; rents not exceeding 15% of the median income in a given municipality
- Housing cooperatives: simplified law for groups of citizens building their own apartments together - DDS supports each local housing cooperative organizationally and financially
- Vacancy tax: properties left empty for more than 12 months are subject to a progressive tax (1-3% of the market value per year) - an incentive to rent or sell, the funds go to the Housing Fund
- Rent control in crisis zones: in municipalities with rents above 30% of the local median income, annual rent increases limited to the inflation rate + 2%
- Revitalization of brownfield sites: adapting disused industrial and office spaces into apartments – Poland has hundreds of such facilities in every major city
PILLAR V: DEMOGRAPHY - PROGRAM FOR PRESERVING THE NATION
5.1 Stop emigration, restore diaspora
Poland is losing tens of thousands of educated citizens every year. DDS proposes not only financial incentives but—fundamentally—building a country where people live with dignity and have a real impact on their surroundings.
- Return Card: A Pole returning from abroad after at least 3 years receives: a 5-year tax exemption (PIT), a preferential housing loan at 1.5% and professional mentoring through the DDS platform
- "Work in Poland" program: a portal connecting Polish specialists abroad with Polish employers and start-ups - remote work from London for a Polish company is a step towards returning
- Integrated care systems: expansion of nurseries and kindergartens to a level that ensures 100% coverage of demand - lack of access to nursery care is one of the key reasons for low fertility rates
- Flexible working arrangements: the right to reduced working hours for parents of children up to 6 years of age without loss of proportional benefits; financed by employers and the National Wealth Fund
- "DDS Childhood Voucher": a monthly benefit of PLN 2,500 for each child for the first 3 years of life + free comprehensive medical care - financed by the extraordinary wealth tax
PILLAR VI: EDUCATION - KNOWLEDGE AS A CIVIC RIGHT
6.1 Education system reform
- Free education from nursery to doctorate: complete elimination of fees for public education at every level; financed by the National Wealth Fund
- Critical skills as a priority: mandatory subjects in critical thinking, fact-checking, logic and digital ethics – from grade 4 of primary school
- Democratic education DDS: introducing a module on direct democracy, citizen rights and DDS mechanisms into school curricula - a conscious citizen is a free citizen
- ddsAI in schools: an AI educational assistant available to every student free of charge, personalizing learning to individual needs, detecting difficulties and suggesting support
- Eliminating the gap between city and countryside: broadband internet for 100% of Polish schools and homes (minimum 100 Mbps) by 2028; Digital Poland DDS program
- Scholarships for the best: talent from the least affluent backgrounds receive full scholarships covering living and tuition costs—an investment in human capital, not escalating privilege
PILLAR VII: SECURITY - SOVEREIGNTY AND PEACE
7.1 National defense as a common good
Poland allocates nearly 5% of its GDP to defense (2025)—one of the highest rates in NATO. The DDS does not question the need for a strong defense against real geopolitical threats, but demands full transparency and democratic control over military spending.
- Each arms contract exceeding PLN 500 million must be approved by a citizen referendum or by the DDS commission with a full technical and financial audit.
- Social "Eastern Shield": DDS supports the construction of fortifications and a defense system on the eastern border, but requires: Polish contractors for at least 70% of contracts; full cost transparency; employment of local communities
- Citizen Cyber Defense: Training 1 Million Poles in Cybersecurity Basics by 2030 – ddsAI Platform Trains Society to Recognize Cyberattacks and Disinformation
- Information neutrality: The Polish intelligence and counterintelligence service must report to the Sejm and the DDS committee every 6 months on disinformation threats – results made public after appropriate anonymization
PILLAR VIII: ENVIRONMENT – POLAND AS A EUROPEAN ECOLOGICAL LEADER
- The right to clean air as a constitutional right: every Pole has the right to air that does not exceed WHO standards; violation of this right by a private or public entity results in financial sanctions
- Green infrastructure: 50% of new public spaces must include green areas; no asphalting of water-absorbing areas in urban areas
- Circular economy: 80% municipal waste recycling target by 2035; deposit fee for plastic packaging; single-use plastics ban from 2027
- Protection of rivers and groundwater: a ban on discharging untreated sewage into rivers with fines of up to 10% of the perpetrator's annual revenue; investments in water and sewage infrastructure in rural areas
- Environmental education: mandatory ecology module in every school; "Every school plants a forest" program - 10 trees per student per year
PILLAR IX: RULE OF LAW AND JUSTICE
- Judicial independence guaranteed by the Constitution: no party, no president, no government can appoint judges without a transparent, citizen-controlled process – the DDS commission audits every judicial appointment
- Jury Trials: Expanding the institution of lay judges and jury trials to all cases over 5 years of potential sentence – citizens judging citizens, not just professional judges
- Zero tolerance for corruption: every public decision is recorded in the DDS system; AI detects statistical anomalies indicating potential corruption and automatically initiates investigations
- Transparency of politicians' finances: every elected politician files a full asset declaration and updates it quarterly – publicly available on the DDS platform; glaring discrepancies trigger an automatic prosecutorial audit
- DDS Code of Ethics: A clear system of rules of conduct for every DDS attorney and officer - violation = automatic suspension and prosecution
PART III: HOW TO IMPLEMENT THE DDS SYSTEM IN POLAND - ACTION PLAN
Phase 0 – Preparation (2026): Embedding
Before formally entering the Polish political scene, DDS is building a social foundation, organizational structures and a technological platform.
- Registration of DDS as a political organization in Poland in accordance with Polish law
- Launch of the Polish-language version of the DDS platform with a registration module, three-factor verification and the first test votes
- Recruitment of the first 1,000 micro-groups in the 10 largest cities (Warsaw, Krakow, Lodz, Wroclaw, Poznan, Gdansk, Szczecin, Bydgoszcz, Lublin, Katowice) - a total of 5,000 pioneer members
- Establishing cooperation with Polish scientific, medical, legal and engineering communities in order to create a network of DDS specialists
- Information campaign: "What is DDS?" — a series of open meetings and webinars in Polish, without manipulation, only with facts and logic
Phase 1 - Growth (2026-2027): Local Structures
- Reaching 50,000 verified DDS members in Poland - 10,000 active micro-groups in each district
- First DDS-level local elections: citizens elect their "DDS delegates" to local governments — not as a party, but as independent candidates on the DDS platform
- Implementation of the participatory budget module in the first 5 pilot municipalities
- Launch of the Polish version of ddsAI with the function of analyzing law and legal acts
- First nationwide DDS vote: citizens vote on first program priorities - results become mandate for DDS delegates
Phase 2 – Expansion (2027-2029): Entering National Politics
- Parliamentary elections: DDS fields candidates in all 41 constituencies – not as a hierarchical party, but as a network of direct democracy delegates
- Electoral goal: 10-15% of votes in the first parliamentary elections = 46-69 seats in the Sejm = real blocking and initiative power
- Each DDS MP votes according to the mandate received from the citizen micro-groups – not at their own discretion; they are accounted for quarterly
- The first pilot nationwide referendums conducted using the DDS platform in parallel with the official ones - as proof of effectiveness and comparison of results
Phase 3 - Transformation (2030+): Poland DDS
- DDS becomes the leading political force in Poland – not by taking power over to the party, but by giving power to the citizens
- Constitutionalization of direct democracy: DDS initiates and conducts a constitutional referendum introducing direct democracy mechanisms into the Constitution of the Republic of Poland
- Poland is becoming a European model of direct democracy – exporting the DDS system to other EU countries
PART IV: ANTICIPATED BENEFITS AND COMPARISON WITH THE CURRENT SYSTEM
Comparison Table: Current Poland vs. Poland DDS
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AREA |
POLAND TODAY |
POLAND DDS (10 YEARS) |
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Power |
Political parties and elites |
Citizens through direct democracy |
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Corruption |
CPI: 52/100 (53rd place) |
Goal: top 20 globally (>70/100) |
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Fiscal deficit |
7.3% of GDP (2025) |
Below 3% of GDP through sealing and the Fund |
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Health care |
National Health Fund deficit ~PLN 14 billion, queues lasting months |
NFZ Plus: zero deficit, queues max 30 days |
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Housing |
Shortage of 2 million apartments, record rents |
500,000 new apartments, social tariffs |
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Demography |
Negative growth, emigration of educated people |
Return Program, Fertility Voucher, stabilization |
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Energy |
60% in fossil fuels, rising prices |
50% renewable energy by 2030, SMR, social tariff |
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Disinformation |
Uncontrolled, no tools |
allddsAI: 24/7 security, media education |
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Transparency |
Limited, selective |
100% transparency through the DDS platform |
Projected economic effects (10-year scenario)
- Additional tax revenues from sealing and property tax: +80-120 billion PLN/year → elimination of the deficit and building of reserves
- GDP growth by an additional 1-1.5% per year thanks to the elimination of corruption, more efficient spending and increased investment confidence
- Reducing healthcare system costs by 15-20% through prevention and telemedicine – even with increased service coverage
- Increase in labor productivity by 8-12% over 10 years thanks to better education, health and reduced bureaucracy
- Demographic stabilization: curbing emigration and returning 200,000-300,000 Poles thanks to improved living and working conditions
CONCLUSION: THE POLAND WE WILL BUILD TOGETHER
Poland has all the resources, talents, and potential to become one of the most equitable, innovative, and democratic countries in the world. Only one thing is missing: a political system that truly serves its citizens, not parties and elites.
DirectDemocracyS doesn't offer utopia. It offers logic, consistency, transparency, and tools—ddsAI, allddsAI, a voting platform, micro-groups of specialists, and a network of mutual accountability—that will allow Poles to manage their country themselves. Not for politicians. Not through politicians. By themselves.
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The principles upon which we stand: Poland's resources belong to the Polish people. Decisions about Poland are made by the Polish people. Control over Poland will always and exclusively rest with the Polish people. No elite, no corporation, no foreign power will change this—because the DDS system does not allow this power to be transferred to anyone. |
Join us. Build the Poland of the future with us—today.
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DirectDemocracyS - True Democracy For All