Portugal ZZ rectangle

DirectDemocracyS

Real Democracy. Real Power. Real Results.

POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, PROGRAM

FINANCIAL AND SOCIAL

FOR PORTUGAL

Critical Analysis of the Current Situation and Concrete Solutions

A radically different alternative, based on logic, common sense,

A rigorous study of reality, truth, and mutual respect.

Version 1.0 — 2025

directdemocracies.org

INTRODUCTION: A NEW POLICY FOR PORTUGAL

Portugal is a country of contrasts. A territory of extraordinary historical, cultural, and human richness, which gave rise to one of the greatest expanding civilizations of the modern world. And, at the same time, a country that has lived for decades trapped in a political, economic, and social model that perpetuates inequalities, wastes talent, exports its best citizens, and subjects the majority of its population to living conditions unworthy of the nation's true potential.

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) presents this program not as just another electoral promise destined to be forgotten, but as a concrete action plan, grounded in rigorous analysis of reality, based on logic, common sense, and respect for the intelligence of Portuguese citizens.

This document analyzes Portugal's real problems with brutal honesty—without euphemisms, without political games, without mincing words—and proposes detailed, functional, and realistically implementable solutions. Each proposal is accompanied by concrete examples, implementation mechanisms, and foreseeable consequences. We don't sell illusions. We sell work, method, and verifiable results.

What sets us apart from traditional parties?

• We don't promise what we can't deliver. Each proposal has defined costs, deadlines, and success indicators.

• We do not rely on funding from private interest groups. DDS is funded exclusively by its members.

• Leadership is collective and rotating. No single person accumulates permanent power.

• Citizens participate directly in decisions through direct digital democracy.

• We are held accountable for the results. Any member who fails to comply will be replaced by the remaining members.

PART I — CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION IN PORTUGAL

1.1 — Political System: Facade Democracy

Portugal formally has a parliamentary representative democracy. In practice, the system has evolved into a party oligarchy where two or three major parties alternate in power, reproducing the same policies with cosmetic variations, serving the same interests and ensuring the perpetuation of a professional political class completely detached from the daily reality of citizens.

The structural problems of the Portuguese political system:

REAL FACT: ABSTENTION IN PORTUGAL

2022 Legislative Elections: 41.4% abstention rate — the highest in Portuguese democratic history.

European elections 2024: 64.6% abstention rate — 2 out of every 3 Portuguese people did not vote.

Local elections 2021: 46.3% abstention rate.

Conclusion: Most citizens have abandoned the electoral system because they rightly realize that voting doesn't change anything substantial.

1.2 — Economic System: Growth without Distribution

The Portuguese economy has grown in recent years, especially driven by tourism, exports, and European funds. However, this growth has disproportionately benefited a minority, while the majority of workers have seen their real purchasing power stagnate or decline. The country has become an attractive destination for foreign investors and tourists, while simultaneously driving out its own citizens.

Critical indicators of economic reality:

Indicator

Current Value (2024)

EU average

Assessment

Average net salary

~1,100 €/month

~€2,100/month

CRITICAL

Minimum wage

870 €/month

~1,250 €/month

VERY LOW

Risk of poverty

17.0%

16.5%

BELOW AVERAGE

Young people at risk of poverty (18-24)

22.5%

19.8%

CONCERNING

Housing cost (% of income)

42% in cities

25% recommended

SERIOUS CRISIS

Emigrants 2023

+80,000/year

BLEEDING

Public debt

99% of GDP

83% of GDP

HIGH

Inequality (Gini)

33.9

30.3

ABOVE AVERAGE

The structural problems of the Portuguese economy:

1.3 — Housing: The Crisis Created by the State

The Portuguese housing crisis is not a natural disaster. It is the direct result of decades of flawed public policies: a lack of public housing, the facilitation of predatory tourism (unlimited local accommodation), tax incentives for speculative foreign real estate investment, and systematic disinvestment in social housing. The State created the problem and then pretended not to know how to solve it.

1.4 — Health: The NHS in Planned Collapse

The Portuguese National Health Service is a historic achievement of which the Portuguese are rightly proud. But this pride cannot be a veil for reality: the NHS is collapsing due to decades of underfunding, mismanagement, lack of incentives to retain professionals, and progressive capture by the private sector.

1.5 — Education: A System that Reproduces Inequalities

The Portuguese education system has improved in basic literacy indicators, but it continues to reproduce social inequalities instead of correcting them. The quality of education varies dramatically between urban and rural public schools, and between families with and without the cultural and economic capital to supplement formal education. Higher education is formally universally accessible, but access to it is stratified in reality.

1.6 — Justice: Slow, Expensive, and Unequal

The Portuguese justice system is formally independent but structurally dysfunctional. Cases drag on for years or decades. The impunity of the powerful is structural—not because judges are corrupt, but because the system was designed in such a way that it never functions with the necessary agility to effectively hold accountable those who have the resources to drag out cases indefinitely.

1.7 — Environment and Territory: Exploitation without Planning

Portugal faces serious environmental risks: recurring and devastating forest fires, progressive drought due to climate change, chaotic land-use planning, coastal erosion, and desertification of the interior. Response policies have been predominantly reactive and insufficient, lacking an integrated long-term territorial plan.

PART II — FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF DDS FOR PORTUGAL

2.1 — Direct Digital Democracy as the Basis of the System

DDS does not believe in delegated and forgotten representation. Citizens should not vote every four years and then be ignored. We propose a system in which every citizen can participate directly in decisions that affect them, through a secure, verified, and auditable digital platform.

2.2 — Non-Transferable Collective Ownership as an Economic Driver

DDS proposes a new ownership model for strategic companies and common resources: Non-Transferable Collective Ownership (NCCO). This is a legal framework in which workers, users, and citizens are co-owners of essential entities, without the possibility of selling or privatizing their shares.

2.3 — Strict Meritocracy in Public Management

The Portuguese state suffers from systematic political appointments to management positions that should be filled by technical experts. DDS proposes a complete reform of the civil service based on verifiable competence, continuous evaluation, and genuine accountability for results.

PART III — REFORM OF THE POLITICAL SYSTEM

3.1 — New Electoral Law

The current Portuguese electoral system is proportional representation by electoral district, with closed lists. This means that citizens vote for parties and not for individuals, and that party leaders control who enters parliament. This model favors party discipline over voter representation. DDS proposes a profound electoral reform.

Concrete proposals for the electoral law:

  1. Mandatory open lists: voters vote for individual candidates within party lists, and can rearrange their preferences. The candidate with the most votes within each list is elected first, regardless of the position assigned to them by the party.
  2. National compensation constituency: 50 of the 230 deputies elected by national compensation constituency to ensure proportionality.
  3. 3% representation threshold: parties with less than 3% of the national vote are not entitled to a parliamentary seat (vs. the current 0% with the possibility of representation by constituency).
  4. Term limits: no deputy, senator, speaker of the chamber, or president of the republic may serve more than two consecutive terms in the same office.
  5. Mandatory parity: 50% of candidates of each gender in real (not symbolic) eligible positions.
  6. Election financing with a drastic maximum limit: legislative election campaigns with a limit of €500,000 per party, audited in real time by an independent entity.

A CONCRETE EXAMPLE: THE IRISH MODEL OF TRANSFERABLE VOTING

Ireland uses the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system, where each voter ranks candidates by preference (1st, 2nd, 3rd...). If the first preferred candidate already has enough votes to be elected, the excess vote is transferred to the second preferred candidate. This system ensures that those elected genuinely reflect voters' preferences and eliminates wasted votes.

Result: more diverse representation, less blind party discipline, greater individual accountability of elected officials to their direct voters.

DDS proposes adapting this model to the Portuguese reality, maintaining proportionality but eliminating closed lists.

3.2 — Reform of the Civil Service and Administration

The Portuguese civil service employs around 750,000 people. It is simultaneously underpaid in many sectors (health, education) and overstaffed in low-value administrative functions. The proposed reform is not about generic "downsizing" but about reorganization based on criteria of efficiency and dignity.

Concrete measures:

3.3 — Combating Corruption: Structural Prevention System

Portugal has a corruption problem that stems not from a lack of laws—there has been considerable legislation on corruption—but from a structural inability to investigate, prosecute, and punish in a timely manner. DDS proposes a different approach: in addition to punishment, eliminating the conditions that allow corruption to thrive.

  1. Special anti-corruption court: creation of a court dedicated exclusively to crimes of corruption, illicit enrichment, and white-collar economic crimes, with specialized judges and maximum trial times of 3 years.
  2. Extinction of the statute of limitations for corruption crimes committed by public office holders while in office.
  3. Declarations of income and interests of all elected officials and public managers published online in an open and comparable format year after year.
  4. Effective whistleblower protection: anonymity guaranteed by an independent entity, compensation for retaliation up to 5 years' salary.
  5. Complete incompatibility: no former government official can work in sectors they regulated for 5 years after the end of their term.
  6. Public audit of all public contracts above €50,000 by an entity independent of political parties.

PART IV — ECONOMIC PROGRAM

4.1 — Reformulation of the Growth Model

Portugal needs to transition from a low-cost, low-value economy to a high-knowledge, high-productivity economy with fair distribution. This cannot be achieved by decree, but through a coordinated set of policies including investment, labor reform, fiscal policy, and industrial strategy.

The 5 Strategic Sectors for the Future of Portugal:

1. Knowledge and Technology Economy

Portugal has a developing technological ecosystem (Web Summit, Lisbon startups, university campuses). But to compete in the long term, it needs to make the leap from a consumer of technology to a producer of cutting-edge technology.

2. High-Quality Agriculture and Food Sovereignty

Portugal imports more than 70% of the food it consumes, an absurd level of dependence for a country with extraordinary agro-climatic conditions. Food sovereignty is a matter of national security, not just agricultural policy.

3. Renewable Energies and Green Energy Exports

Portugal has extraordinary potential in solar, wind, hydro, and wave energy. Instead of just using this energy domestically, it could become a net exporter of green energy to Europe—creating thousands of skilled jobs and significant national revenue.

4. Quality Tourism Instead of Mass Tourism

The current tourism model in Portugal is destroying what makes it unique: its historic cities, its local culture, its landscape. Lisbon and Porto have increasingly become theme parks for tourists, while residents are being driven out. A radical paradigm shift is needed.

5. Ocean Economy: Portugal as a Maritime Power

Portugal has the largest Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) in Europe, covering more than 1.7 million km². This extraordinary resource is underutilized. A serious strategy for the ocean economy could generate tens of thousands of quality jobs and position Portugal as a world leader in emerging sectors.

4.2 — Tax Reform: Taxing What Should Be Taxed

The Portuguese tax system excessively penalizes labor—which is heavily taxed through personal income tax and social security contributions—while protecting capital income, large inheritances, and speculative real estate wealth. This distortion is both unfair and economically irrational.

Concrete tax reforms:

Measurement

Current Situation

DDS Proposal

Expected Impact

IRS — Average tax brackets

37% from €25,076

37% starting from €40,000

Middle class relief

IRS — Low Incomes

14.5% starting from €7,703

Full exemption up to €12,000

1.5 million beneficiaries

Tax on speculative real estate capital gains

28% (flat)

45% for properties sold in <5 years

Reduces speculation.

IRC for SMEs

17% on the first €25,000

10% on the first €50k

Supports job creation

Taxation of large fortunes (>€5M)

Non-existent

1.5% annually on net value

Fair redistribution

TSU (employer contribution)

23.75%

18% with compensation through budgetary means.

Reduces the cost of legal labor.

VAT on essential food items

6%

0% for defined basic food basket

Purchasing power of workers

Taxation of speculative financial transactions

Non-existent

0.1% on transactions >€100,000

New recipe

These reforms are designed to be neutral in terms of overall tax revenue: what is lost in personal income tax and corporate income tax is offset by new taxes on income from speculative capital and large fortunes. The goal is not to reduce state revenue but to redistribute the tax burden fairly.

4.3 — Labor Policy: Dignity, Security, and Real Flexibility

The Portuguese labor market is divided in two: a core of workers with permanent contracts and strong labor protections, and a vast periphery of precarious workers, "false self-employed" workers, platform workers, and informal workers without real protection. This duality is both unfair and economically inefficient.

  1. Minimum wage at €1,200 by 2027, indexed annually to real inflation plus 1% — an end to annual negotiations that always fall short of the loss of purchasing power.
  2. Regulation of digital platforms (Uber, Glovo, Deliveroo): platform workers are workers, not "independent partners" — right to a contract, vacation and sick pay, employer contribution to social security.
  3. "Green receipts": reform of the system — anyone who earns more than 70% of their income from a single client is automatically reclassified as an employee, with all the corresponding rights.
  4. 4-day work week (32 hours) with salary maintenance: mandatory pilot program for companies with more than 50 employees in applicable sectors, with evaluation at the end of 2 years.
  5. Remote work as a right: any worker in compatible roles is entitled to at least 2 days a week of remote work, without the need for an individual agreement with the employer.
  6. Employee-controlled time bank: an end to time banks unilaterally imposed by the employer.
  7. Mandatory continuing training: a minimum of 40 hours/year of training per worker, paid for by the employer, with a catalog certified by the State.

PART V — HOUSING: SOLVING THE CRISIS DEFINITIVELY

5.1 — Diagnosis and Real Causes of the Crisis

The housing crisis has identified causes and known solutions. The problem is political will: the groups that benefit from the status quo—owners of multiple properties, real estate investment funds, short-term rental operators, property developers—have disproportionate political influence over traditional parties.

The 5 Main Causes of the Housing Crisis in Portugal

1. LACK OF PUBLIC HOUSING: Portugal has less than 3% of its housing stock in public ownership — Austria has 60%, the Netherlands 30%, and France 17%. Decades of disinvestment have left the State without the instruments to balance the market.

2. LOCAL ACCOMMODATION WITHOUT REAL LIMITS: The proliferation of local accommodation (Airbnb and similar) has removed hundreds of thousands of homes from the residential rental market, reducing the available supply and putting pressure on prices.

3. GOLDEN VISA AND TAX INCENTIVES FOR FOREIGN INVESTMENT: Portugal sold residences to foreigners with tax benefits (NHR, Golden Visa), attracting speculative investment that unfairly competed with Portuguese residents.

4. 700,000 VACANT HOMES: There are more empty homes in Portugal than families without adequate housing. The problem is not one of total quantity but of distribution and access.

5. REAL ESTATE SPECULATION WITHOUT PENALTY: Keeping a vacant property in an area with housing shortages has no significant tax cost — which encourages speculative holding.

5.2 — National Housing Program DDS

Measure 1: Massive Construction of Quality Public Housing

The Portuguese state should build and directly manage quality public housing — not stigmatized "social housing estates," but housing integrated into mixed-use neighborhoods, with dignified architecture, suitable locations, and rents calculated as a percentage of tenants' income.

Measure 2: Tax on Vacant Housing and Speculation

Measure 3: Effective Regulation of Local Accommodation

Measure 4: Leasing with Real Guarantees

A CONCRETE EXAMPLE: VIENNA AND THE MODEL OF QUALITY SOCIAL HOUSING

Vienna has 60% of its housing stock owned publicly or by non-profit organizations. Average rents are between 40% and 60% of what the market value would be. As a result, Vienna is consistently considered the city with the best quality of life in the world, with a stable middle class, low inequality, and high social cohesion.

Portugal could implement an adapted model: not trying to buy existing properties (which is too expensive) but building new, high-quality public housing in strategic locations, using underutilized public land (there are thousands of hectares of public land in urban areas).

Predicted consequence in 10 years: reduction of rents in the private market by 20-30% due to increased public supply, return of young professionals to large cities, reduction of emigration for housing reasons.

PART VI — HEALTH: REBUILDING THE NHS AS A REAL RIGHT

6.1 — Strategic Vision for Health

The National Health Service (SNS) is not a cost to the State. It is an investment — in productivity, in social cohesion, in quality of life and in public health. A country where workers do not have access to quality healthcare is a country with lower productivity, more absenteeism, more inequality and more long-term expenses (untreated chronic diseases cost more than prevention).

6.2 — Concrete Measures for the National Health Service

Human Resources: Retaining Professionals in Portugal

  1. Immediate salary increase for doctors and nurses in the National Health Service (SNS): specialist doctors with 5 years of experience should earn at least €5,500 gross — comparable to the salary they would earn in the United Kingdom or Germany. Estimated annual cost: €1.2 billion, financed by increased taxation on local accommodation and speculative housing.
  2. Geographical retention bonus: professionals who accept placement in inland regions or areas with staffing shortages receive a bonus of €800/month and free or subsidized housing.
  3. Compensation for doctors trained in Portugal who emigrated: partial compensation for the cost of training (average €100,000 per doctor) if they return within 10 years and remain in the National Health Service (SNS) for a minimum of 5 years.
  4. Creation of 2,000 new annual places in medical training and 3,000 in nursing training — with equivalent investment in facilities and teachers.

Infrastructure: Modernizing without Privatizing

  1. Plan to modernize hospital equipment: CT scans, MRIs, and other advanced diagnostic equipment with insufficient capacity — an investment of 800 million euros over 5 years.
  2. "Digital Hospital": a single, interoperable clinical information system across the entire National Health Service (NHS) that eliminates the need to repeat previously performed tests and physical paper-based processes.
  3. Expanded Family Health Units: all Portuguese citizens should have a family doctor — recruitment plan and opening of new Family Health Units for universal coverage within 3 years.
  4. Mental health: creation of 200 new community mental health teams spread throughout the country — mental health is still treated as a luxury when it is a basic need.

Prevention: Shifting the Focus from Disease to Health

PART VII — EDUCATION: FOR A COUNTRY THAT LEARNS AND INNOVATES

7.1 — Education System Reform

Education is the only investment that guarantees a return across generations. A country that does not invest in the education of its citizens is mortgaging its future. Portugal has improved significantly in basic literacy indicators in recent decades, but continues to fail in the transition from education to the labor market and in equalizing opportunities regardless of social origin.

Basic and Secondary Education:

  1. A revamped curriculum with an emphasis on critical thinking, problem-solving, communication, and teamwork—21st-century skills that the current model systematically ignores.
  2. Programming and digital literacy instruction should be mandatory from the 5th grade onwards — not as a standalone subject but integrated into the rest of the curriculum.
  3. Reducing class sizes to a maximum of 22 students in primary education, to allow for genuine personalized learning.
  4. Dignified vocational training: parity in prestige and funding between academic and professional pathways, with mandatory internships in companies for all vocational courses.
  5. Teaching Portuguese as a second language to children of immigrants — real integration, not marginalization.

Teachers: The Central Profession

Higher education:

  1. Tuition fees are tiered based on family income: those who cannot afford it, do not pay. Those with high incomes pay the full amount. Objective: to eliminate university dropout due to economic reasons.
  2. Public university residences: construction of 20,000 new beds in state-run residences for displaced students — the current deficit is over 50,000 beds.
  3. Promoting applied research: incentives for universities that develop partnerships with industry and create marketable spin-offs.
  4. Recognition of non-formal skills: a system for validating and certifying knowledge acquired through professional experience, facilitating the return of adults to higher education.

PART VIII — JUSTICE: FAST, ACCESSIBLE, AND EQUAL FOR ALL

8.1 — Structural Reform of the Judicial System

Slow justice is not justice — it's impunity delayed. The inefficiency of the Portuguese judicial system has enormous costs: for citizens who wait years for decisions, for companies that don't invest because they don't trust the effective resolution of disputes, and for democracy when the powerful use delays as a weapon of impunity.

  1. Specialized anti-corruption court with 50 judges dedicated exclusively to corruption, economic, and white-collar crimes. Maximum trial time: 3 years from the indictment order.
  2. Digital civil procedure: elimination of physical paper files, real-time online access for parties to case files, and video conference hearings when the parties consent.
  3. Increase in the number of judges and magistrates: Portugal has one of the lowest ratios of judges per capita in the EU — a 30% increase in 5 years through accelerated recruitment processes.
  4. Alternative dispute resolution methods (mediation, arbitration) for disputes valued at less than €75,000 — a prior attempt at certified mediation is mandatory.
  5. Free legal assistance: the current legal aid system is so bureaucratic that many who are entitled to it cannot access it. Complete reform with a simple digital platform.
  6. End of procedural privileges: defendants holding public office no longer have a longer statute of limitations—they have a shorter one, because they have more resources to delay proceedings.

PART IX — ENVIRONMENT, TERRITORY AND CLIMATE TRANSITION

9.1 — Portugal and the Climate Crisis: Vulnerability and Opportunity

Portugal is among the European countries most vulnerable to climate change. Prolonged drought, forest fires, rising sea levels, coastal erosion, and heat waves are already realities with increasing economic and human impact. But Portugal also has a historic opportunity: its geographical position and natural resources place it in a privileged position to be a European leader in the green economy.

9.2 — Forest Management and Fire Prevention Program

The problem of forest fires in Portugal is fundamentally a land management problem. The proliferation of eucalyptus and maritime pine monocultures, coupled with rural abandonment and the absence of fuel management, creates conditions for cyclically repeated catastrophes. The solution exists and is known—what's lacking is its serious implementation.

9.3 — Land Use Planning

9.4 — Energy Transition

PART X — SOCIAL PROGRAM: GUARANTEES FOR ALL PORTUGUESE CITIZENS

10.1 — Basic Citizen Income

The DDS proposes the progressive implementation of a universal Basic Income — not as a replacement for existing social benefits, but as a safety net that eliminates absolute poverty and simplifies the social protection system.

REAL EXAMPLE: FINLAND AND KENYA

Finland tested a basic income of €560/month with 2,000 unemployed people between 2017 and 2018. The result: significantly improved mental well-being, without a reduction in job seeking (contrary to the myth), and with more entrepreneurship among the beneficiaries.

Kenya (GiveDirectly) is conducting the world's largest 12-year basic income study — preliminary results: increased consumption, more investment in children's education, more local economic activity.

DDS proposes a pilot program in two Portuguese municipalities before national implementation, with rigorous and independent evaluation at the end of 2 years.

10.2 — Protection of Family and Childhood

10.3 — Dignified Aging

10.4 — Immigration: Real Integration, Not Exploitation

Portugal is today a country of significant immigration. More than 1 million immigrants reside in Portugal—an enormous economic and cultural contribution that the country cannot do without. But the current integration model is inadequate: immigrants are used as cheap labor without real access to their rights.

PART XI — FINANCIAL PROGRAM: HOW TO FINANCE ALL OF THIS

11.1 — Financial Viability of the Program

A legitimate criticism of any ambitious political program is: "How are they going to pay for all this?" It's a question that DDS doesn't avoid. On the contrary, it answers it in detail. Our program isn't a list of empty promises—it's an integrated plan where every expense has an identified source of funding.

Additional Expense Area

Estimated Annual Cost (€)

Source of Funding

Salary increase for SNS (doctors/nurses)

1.2 billion euros

Taxation of speculative housing

Public housing construction (amortization)

800 million euros

EIB fund + vacant housing tax

Basic Citizen Income (phased)

3.5 billion euros

Reduction of redundant payments + capital

Free public daycare centers (0-3 years)

600 million euros

Reduction of tax exemptions for companies

Education: salaries and infrastructure

700 million euros

Combating tax evasion (est. €6 billion/year)

Hospital modernization

800 million euros

European Cohesion Fund + OE

Energy transition

1,000 M€

Carbon recipes + EIB

Forest management and land use

400 million euros

PAC + OE

TOTAL ADDITIONAL EXPENSE

~9,000 million euros/year

Source of Additional Revenue

Annual Estimate (€)

Combating tax evasion (potential identified by the Tax Authority)

4,000 – 6,000 million euros

Taxation of large fortunes (>€5M)

1.5 billion euros

Tax on vacant housing and real estate speculation

800 million euros

Tourist tax increased

400 million euros

Taxation of speculative financial transactions

600 million euros

Reduction of fossil fuel subsidies and unjustified exemptions

1.2 billion euros

Tax on local accommodation

300 million euros

Administrative savings (bureaucratic simplification)

800 million euros

TOTAL ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL REVENUE

~9.600 – 11.600 M€

Conclusion: the program is financially viable within the rules of the European Stability and Growth Pact, with room for a gradual reduction in public debt. It does not require additional deficits—it requires a fair reorganization of tax revenue and an effective fight against tax evasion.

11.2 — Public Debt Management

PART XII — FOREIGN POLICY AND LUSOPHONE WORLD

12.1 — Portugal in the World: Real Strategic Ambition

Portugal is a small country in terms of territory and population, but with an extraordinary global footprint: the Portuguese language is spoken by more than 280 million people across 4 continents. The CPLP (Community of Portuguese Language Countries) is a strategic asset that Portugal has been using far below its potential.

12.2 — Portugal in the European Union

Portugal is a net beneficiary of the EU, and its European integration has generally been positive. However, Portugal often adopts a too passive stance in European negotiations, accepting unfavorable compromises due to a lack of strategic assertiveness. The DDS proposes a more active and assertive European stance.

PART XIII — IMPLEMENTATION PLAN: HOW AND WHEN

13.1 — Phasing in 3 Time Horizons

HORIZON 1 — FIRST 100 DAYS: WHAT WE DO IMMEDIATELY

• Presentation of draft laws to increase the minimum wage to €1,050 (step 1 towards €1,200).

• Immediate moratorium on new local accommodation licenses in areas of high housing pressure.

• Approval of the reinforced conflict of interest law (revolving door).

• Creation of the Electoral Reform Commission with a 12-month mandate.

• Launch of the real-time public contract transparency portal.

• Declaration of a housing emergency with a 6-month plan for the first 5,000 public housing units.

• Approval of a 15% salary increase for doctors and nurses in the National Health Service (1st step).

HORIZON 2 — YEARS 1 TO 3: STRUCTURAL REFORMS

• Approval of the new electoral law with open lists.

• Start of construction of the first 50,000 public housing units.

• Complete tax reform (new tax brackets, exemption up to €12,000, wealth taxation).

• Specialized anti-corruption court in operation.

• RBC pilot program in 2 municipalities.

• Curriculum reform for primary and secondary education.

• 100% of urban public transport decarbonized.

• Forest conversion program initiated.

HORIZON 3 — YEARS 3 TO 10: SYSTEMIC TRANSFORMATION

• Universal Basic Income implemented.

• 200,000 public housing units built and occupied.

• 100% of electricity from renewable sources.

• Public debt reduced to 80% of GDP.

• Average Portuguese salary in line with the European average.

• Emigration of skilled professionals reversed — positive migration balance.

• Absolute poverty eliminated.

• A healthcare system with true universal coverage and no waiting lists exceeding 3 months.

13.2 — Monitoring and Accountability Mechanisms

Any program without monitoring mechanisms is just a list of good intentions. The DDS establishes success indicators and accountability mechanisms from the outset.

CONCLUSION: THE PORTUGAL WE CAN BE

Portugal has all the ingredients to be an extraordinary country: a privileged geographical location, unique natural resources, a global language, a rich and diverse culture, and — above all — capable, resilient and intelligent people who deserve a country worthy of their stature.

What is lacking is not talent or resources. What is lacking is a political system that works for the citizens instead of for itself; an economy that distributes what it produces instead of concentrating it; a state that serves instead of serving itself; and a society that offers real opportunities to everyone, regardless of where they were born.

DirectDemocracyS doesn't promise an immediate paradise. It promises honest work, real plans, total transparency, and the courage to make the tough decisions that traditional parties avoid because they clash with the interests of their funders.

The Portugal we can be in 2035 is a country where a young doctor doesn't need to emigrate to earn what they deserve; where a middle-class family can have a decent home without spending more than 30% of their income; where justice works for everyone and not just for those who can afford it; where forests don't burn catastrophically every summer; and where every citizen has not only the formal right to vote but the real power to influence the decisions that affect their life.

This Portugal exists. It is within reach. But it demands a real break with the ways of doing politics that produced the current situation. This break is what DirectDemocracyS represents.

JOIN DIRECTDEMOCRACYS

This program is a starting point, not a sacred document. DDS believes that the best political programs are built collectively, with the active participation of citizens.

If you agree with this vision — or if you disagree and have better proposals — come and participate. DDS is a members' organization, funded by members, managed by members. Power does not belong to one leader. It belongs to everyone.

directdemocracies.org | public.directdemocracies.org

DirectDemocracyS — Real Democracy. Real Power. Real Results.

© 2025 DirectDemocracyS — All rights reserved. Reproduction authorized provided the source is cited.