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DirectDemocracyS
A Global Political Organisation Built on Logic, Truth and Shared Leadership
POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL AND SOCIAL PROGRAMME
FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM
Critical Analysis of the Current Situation
and
A Detailed, Realistic and Fully Functional Programme of Solutions
2025 Edition
www.directdemocracys.org
DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is not a traditional political party. It is a global political organisation built on a radical but simple premise: politics must be governed by logic, common sense, study, reality, truth, consistency, and mutual respect. DDS rejects all forms of corruption, careerism, ideology for its own sake, and the subordination of the common good to the interests of elites, financial powers, or ideological factions.
This document applies the DDS method to the United Kingdom. It begins with an honest, unflinching analysis of the real situation — not the version presented by incumbent governments or mainstream media. It then presents a detailed, realistic, and fully functional programme of solutions, with concrete examples, measurable targets, and predicted consequences.
DDS does not promise utopia. It promises the application of intelligence, honesty, and collective will to real problems. Every proposal in this document is grounded in evidence, precedent from comparable nations, or demonstrable logical necessity. Where trade-offs exist, they are named openly.
Core DDS Principles applied throughout this document:
PART ONE
CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION
The United Kingdom presents itself to the world as a model democracy. The reality, examined with honesty, is considerably more troubling. The Westminster system, founded on adversarial two-party competition, produces governments that routinely win absolute parliamentary power with significantly less than half the popular vote. In the 2019 general election, the Conservative Party won 56% of seats with 43.6% of votes. In 2024, Labour won 63% of seats with just 33.7% of the popular vote — the lowest vote share for a majority government in British democratic history.
This structural distortion has profound consequences. Millions of voters are effectively disenfranchised in safe seats, where the outcome is predetermined regardless of turnout or local sentiment. The First Past the Post (FPTP) electoral system entrenches a duopoly, making it nearly impossible for new political forces to gain representation proportional to their actual support. In 2024, Reform UK received approximately 14% of the national vote and won only 5 seats. The Liberal Democrats received 12% and won 71 seats. The mathematical injustice is self-evident.
Structural failures of the current political system:
The result is a political class that is increasingly disconnected from the lived experience of ordinary citizens, self-perpetuating, and structurally incentivised to prioritise party survival over national welfare.
The UK is the sixth or seventh largest economy in the world by GDP. This statistic, frequently cited by politicians of all parties, conceals a structural reality of profound inequality, chronic underinvestment, and an economic model biased towards finance and property at the expense of productive industry, innovation, and widespread prosperity.
Since the 2008 financial crisis, the UK has experienced the worst decade of productivity growth since the Industrial Revolution. Real wages for the median worker were lower in 2023 than in 2008 in inflation-adjusted terms. The economy has become dangerously dependent on consumer debt, housing asset inflation, and the financial services sector concentrated in London, while manufacturing, research-led industry, and regional economies have been systematically neglected.
The 2016 Brexit referendum and its aftermath compounded these structural weaknesses. Trade friction with the European Union — still the UK's largest trading partner — has increased costs for businesses and consumers, reduced foreign direct investment relative to comparable economies, and created ongoing bureaucratic complexity that particularly burdens small and medium enterprises. Official estimates suggest Brexit has reduced UK GDP by approximately 4-5% relative to what it would otherwise have been, equivalent to a permanent annual loss of around £100 billion.
Key economic pathologies:
The NHS was the defining achievement of the post-war British welfare state. Today it is in the deepest crisis of its existence. Waiting lists for elective treatment exceeded 7.6 million patients in 2024. Ambulance response times, A&E waiting times, cancer treatment waiting times, and mental health waiting times all breach the targets that the NHS itself defines as clinically safe.
The causes are multiple. Over a decade of real-terms funding constraints under austerity policies between 2010 and 2019 stripped the NHS of the resilience and capacity it needed to absorb demographic growth and increasing complexity of need. Staff shortages are severe: the NHS in England alone has approximately 100,000 vacancy posts. A combination of poor workforce planning, inadequate pay, poor working conditions, and the loss of EU freedom of movement has depleted the clinical workforce. The partial privatisation of support services has reduced quality and increased cost. The internal market introduced in the 1990s adds administrative burden without clinical benefit.
England's school system exhibits sharp and worsening inequality. The quality of education a child receives remains heavily dependent on parental income and postcode. Private schools, attended by approximately 7% of pupils, educate a disproportionate share of those who subsequently dominate elite universities, senior civil service, law, medicine, and politics — perpetuating a class-based reproduction of advantage that is contrary to any meaningful concept of meritocracy.
Teacher recruitment and retention is in crisis. Starting salaries have failed to keep pace with graduate earnings in other professions. The school curriculum is narrowly focused on standardised testing, reducing creativity, critical thinking, and genuine intellectual development. Higher education fees, introduced at £9,000 per year in 2012 and subsequently raised, have loaded young people with debts averaging over £45,000 that many will never fully repay, in a system that generates profit for neither graduates nor the public.
The UK builds approximately 200,000-230,000 new homes per year against a stated government target of 300,000, and against a genuine need estimated at over 350,000. Social housing — once a major provider of affordable homes — has been decimated by decades of Right to Buy without adequate replacement. The private rented sector has grown to fill the gap, but private rents are high, security of tenure is poor, and quality is inconsistent. Homelessness has risen substantially; rough sleeping, though only the most visible symptom, doubled over the decade 2010-2020.
The social care system — providing support to elderly and disabled people — is in functional crisis. It is chronically underfunded, staffed by low-paid workers with high turnover, and operates across a fragmented patchwork of public, private, and voluntary providers with inconsistent standards. The boundary between health care (free at point of use) and social care (means-tested and frequently charged) is arbitrary, administratively complex, and creates perverse incentives. Hundreds of thousands of people wait in hospital beds for care packages that would allow safe discharge, at enormous cost to both the individuals and the NHS.
The UK is one of the most unequal societies in the developed world. The Gini coefficient — the standard measure of income inequality — places the UK significantly above Germany, France, Scandinavia, and the Netherlands. Wealth inequality is even more extreme than income inequality: the wealthiest 10% of households own approximately 44% of total household wealth, while the bottom 50% own approximately 9%.
Class, race, and geography intersect in inequality. Ethnic minority citizens face statistically significant disadvantages in employment, housing, criminal justice, and health outcomes that cannot be explained by factors other than discrimination. Regional inequality is among the highest of any comparably sized developed economy. A person born in Blackpool, Middlesbrough, or Merthyr Tydfil faces dramatically worse life expectancy, educational outcomes, and economic prospects than one born in the Home Counties — not because of personal failing, but because of systematic structural disadvantage.
Food poverty has become normalised. In 2023-24, the Trussell Trust and independent food banks distributed over 3 million food parcels to people unable to feed themselves or their families — in the sixth or seventh largest economy on earth. This is not an unfortunate anomaly; it is the predictable consequence of deliberate policy choices: real-terms cuts to benefits, the five-week Universal Credit wait, below-inflation upratings, and the removal of the £20 Universal Credit uplift.
The UK has made genuine progress on climate: electricity generation is substantially decarbonised, with renewables providing the majority of power in many periods. The Climate Change Act 2008 was a globally significant piece of legislation. However, the pace of the energy transition has been inconsistent, and critical decisions have been delayed or reversed under pressure from fossil fuel interests and short-term political calculation.
The 2023-24 decision to issue over 100 new North Sea oil and gas licences, while simultaneously weakening energy efficiency standards for homes and delaying electric vehicle transition targets, demonstrated a fundamental incoherence in UK energy and climate policy. Domestic energy efficiency is among the worst in Europe: millions of homes leak heat through uninsulated walls, roofs, and windows, costing residents money and generating unnecessary emissions. The Green Homes Grant scheme was announced, inadequately funded, administratively bungled, and cancelled within months.
PART TWO
THE DIRECTDEMOCRACYS PROGRAMME FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM
Each section below follows the same structure: diagnosis (what the problem is), solution (what DDS proposes), implementation (how it is done, step by step), concrete example (a specific, real illustration), and predicted consequences (what we expect to happen, honestly stated, including trade-offs).
Diagnosis:
First Past the Post systematically distorts democratic representation, entrenches a two-party duopoly, and produces governments without genuine majority mandates. It must be replaced.
Solution:
DDS proposes the adoption of a Mixed-Member Proportional (MMP) system — the same system used in Germany, New Zealand, and Scotland for Holyrood elections — for Westminster elections within five years. Under MMP, each voter casts two votes: one for a local constituency MP (preserving local representation), and one for a party list from which additional seats are allocated to ensure the final result is proportional to the national party vote share.
Implementation:
Concrete example:
In the 2024 general election, Reform UK received 14.3% of votes and won 5 seats (0.8%). Under MMP, they would have received approximately 90 seats. The Liberal Democrats' 12.2% of votes would have yielded approximately 80 seats rather than 71. Labour's 33.7% would yield approximately 220 seats rather than 412. No party would command an automatic majority; coalition and compromise would be mandatory. This directly reflects the actual distribution of political opinion in the country.
Predicted consequences:
Diagnosis:
The House of Lords is constitutionally indefensible. Approximately 800 unelected individuals exercise significant legislative power. Many owe their seats to political patronage, financial donations, or hereditary privilege. It must be reformed fundamentally.
Solution:
Replace the House of Lords with a directly elected Senate of 300 members, elected by proportional representation in regional multi-member constituencies (12 regions of approximately 25 members each), serving fixed 6-year terms with one-third elected every two years to ensure continuity.
Implementation:
Concrete example:
Currently, a law passed by the Commons against the will of, say, 45% of voters can be amended by Lords many of whom were appointed by the very party that passed it. A Senate elected proportionally in regions would provide a genuine check on Commons excess, represent geographic diversity, and carry democratic legitimacy. The German Bundesrat model, representing Lander governments, is a comparable precedent for a functional second chamber with a distinct democratic mandate.
Predicted consequences:
Diagnosis:
The movement of senior politicians and civil servants into private sector roles in industries they previously regulated is a structural corruption of the democratic process. It creates incentives for officials to make decisions that serve future employers rather than the public.
Solution:
Concrete example:
Between 2012 and 2022, over 50 former ministers and senior officials took positions with defence contractors, financial institutions, or health companies they had previously overseen. The Advisory Committee on Business Appointments (ACOBA) — the body supposedly overseeing this — had no enforcement powers and issued toothless recommendations that were routinely ignored. Under the DDS system, each such appointment would require approval from the independent commissioner, and breach would trigger a criminal investigation.
Diagnosis:
Representative democracy, even when well-functioning, tends to shorten time horizons to electoral cycles and reduce complex policy questions to simplified partisan positions. Citizens' Assemblies — panels of randomly selected ordinary citizens who deliberate in depth on specific policy questions — provide a proven mechanism for high-quality, non-partisan democratic deliberation on difficult issues.
Solution:
Institutionalise Citizens' Assemblies as a standard tool of British democracy. DDS proposes that parliament be required to convene a Citizens' Assembly on any major constitutional or ethical question (electoral reform, assisted dying, drug policy, etc.) before a parliamentary vote, and that the Assembly's conclusions be formally considered and publicly responded to by government.
Concrete example:
Ireland's Citizens' Assembly on abortion (2016-2017) demonstrated that 99 randomly selected citizens, given high-quality information and structured deliberation time, could reach nuanced, considered recommendations on one of the most divisive political questions in any society. The Assembly recommended liberalisation; a referendum followed; the result was accepted across the political spectrum. The UK can adopt this model for its own contested questions.
Diagnosis:
The UK lacks a coherent, long-term industrial strategy. Unlike Germany (Mittelstand policy, vocational training system, industrial banks), France (strategic state investment), or South Korea (deliberate industrial upgrading), the UK has repeatedly adopted and abandoned industrial strategies as governments change. The result is underinvestment in advanced manufacturing, clean technology, life sciences, and digital infrastructure relative to comparable economies.
Solution:
Establish a UK Strategic Investment Authority (SIA), modelled on Germany's KfW development bank and the German council of economic advisors, with a statutory mandate independent of political cycles, capitalised at £50 billion over ten years. The SIA would have three principal functions:
Concrete example:
The UK has world-class university research in battery technology, green hydrogen, and offshore wind engineering. What it lacks is the mechanism to translate research into manufacturing at scale. The Rolls-Royce small modular reactor programme, the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, and the Faraday Battery Challenge all show the model working in small instances. The SIA would operate this model systematically and at scale. Precedent: Germany's KfW bank has assets of over €500 billion and has consistently been cited as a key driver of German industrial competitiveness.
Predicted consequences:
Diagnosis:
The UK tax system is dysfunctional in three ways: it is extraordinarily complex (over 20,000 pages of tax code), systematically unfair (taxing income from work more heavily than income from wealth), and perversely structured (penalising productive investment while subsidising asset holding).
Solution:
DDS proposes a comprehensive tax reform over a five-year period, with the following core elements:
1. Equalise the taxation of income from work and wealth.
Capital Gains Tax rates will be aligned with Income Tax rates. Currently, a person earning £80,000 from employment pays 40% marginal rate on income above £50,270. A person earning £80,000 from the sale of assets pays 20% (or 28% on residential property). This differential has no economic justification and primarily benefits those who already own substantial assets.
2. Replace Council Tax with a proportional property value levy.
Council Tax is calculated on 1991 property values and is inherently regressive: a household in a £500,000 home in London pays less as a proportion of value than a household in a £100,000 home in Hartlepool. Replace with a flat annual levy of 0.5% on the current market value of all residential property, replacing both Council Tax and Stamp Duty Land Tax. Owner-occupied primary residences receive a £200,000 value exemption. Deferral mechanisms for asset-rich, income-poor households (e.g. elderly widows) allow payment from estate.
3. Tax reform for corporations: effective rates, not nominal rates.
The UK's headline corporation tax rate is 25%. The effective rate paid by many large multinationals is far lower due to profit-shifting, transfer pricing, and complex reliefs. DDS proposes adoption of the OECD global minimum corporate tax of 15% as a floor, the closure of major relief schemes used primarily for profit-shifting, and the introduction of a turnover-based minimum tax (1% of UK turnover for companies with over £10m annual UK revenue) as a backstop against base erosion.
4. Tax relief for genuine productive investment.
Increase R&D tax credits for companies investing in UK-based research and development to 35% for SMEs and 20% for large companies, with enhanced credits for investment in economically disadvantaged regions. Introduce accelerated depreciation for investment in clean energy equipment, advanced manufacturing machinery, and digital infrastructure.
Concrete example of impact:
Under the current Council Tax system, a band D property in Westminster (worth approximately £1.5m) pays approximately £1,000/year in council tax — 0.07% of value. A band D property in County Durham (worth approximately £150,000) pays approximately £2,000/year — 1.3% of value. The regressive absurdity of this is indefensible. Under the DDS proportional property levy, the Westminster property (above the £200,000 exemption) would contribute approximately £6,500/year, and the Durham property approximately £0 (below the exemption). Revenue is redistributed from high-value to average-value properties; local authority funding becomes dramatically more equitable geographically.
Predicted consequences:
Diagnosis:
Brexit has created real and measurable trade friction between the UK and its largest trading partner. The debate has been paralysed by political identity rather than economic analysis. The question is not whether to relitigate the 2016 referendum — DDS does not propose rejoining the EU in the short term — but how to reduce the demonstrable economic costs of the current arrangement through pragmatic negotiation.
Solution:
DDS proposes a multi-year programme of selective re-integration with EU regulatory frameworks in areas where the economic cost of divergence is clearest and the political cost of alignment is lowest:
Concrete example:
The British shellfish industry — crab, lobster, mussels — was devastated by post-Brexit export certification requirements. Exporting a consignment of crabs to France now requires certificates costing hundreds of pounds and takes days longer than before. Under a UK-EU Veterinary Agreement (modelled on the Norway-EU arrangement), these checks disappear entirely. The Scottish shellfish export sector alone would recover an estimated £80-100 million annually.
Predicted consequences:
Diagnosis:
The NHS requires sustained additional funding, structural reform, and a workforce strategy. These three elements must be addressed simultaneously; addressing only one will not be sufficient.
Solution — Funding:
DDS proposes a dedicated, ring-fenced Health and Care Precept of 3% on incomes above £25,000, applied equally to employment income and investment income (eliminating the current exemption for investment income from National Insurance). This is expected to raise approximately £40-45 billion annually — sufficient to eliminate the NHS waiting list backlog within three years, provide meaningful pay increases for clinical staff, and fully fund the capital investment programme the NHS requires.
Solution — Workforce:
Solution — Structure:
Abolish NHS England as a separate administrative layer and return operational oversight to the Secretary of State with direct parliamentary accountability. Establish integrated Health and Social Care Boards at local authority level, combining NHS and local authority social care commissioning to eliminate the perverse incentive of care being 'parked' in the more expensively funded NHS system.
Concrete example:
In Denmark, roughly comparable in population to Scotland, the average wait for a non-emergency hospital procedure is 30 days. The standard of care is comparable to or better than the UK. The key difference is not organisational genius but funding: Denmark spends approximately 10.5% of GDP on health; the UK spends approximately 8.5%. The gap in spending — approximately 2% of UK GDP, or roughly £50 billion — explains approximately the gap in performance. The DDS Health and Care Precept closes most of this gap within five years.
Predicted consequences:
Diagnosis:
English education is structured around credential production and standardised testing rather than the development of capability, curiosity, and civic competence. The result is a system that produces significant inequality in outcomes without a commensurate return in human development or economic productivity.
Solution:
Concrete example:
Finland, consistently one of the world's highest-performing education systems, has: no standardised national testing before age 16; teachers drawn from the top third of graduates; equal per-pupil funding regardless of school location; no private schools. The UK's fixation on testing, league tables, and the private-state divide produces worse aggregate outcomes at greater inequality. The DDS programme does not copy Finland mechanically, but draws on its demonstrated evidence that teacher quality, equitable funding, and broad curriculum produce better results than marketisation.
Diagnosis:
The UK housing crisis is primarily a supply crisis compounded by a planning system that protects existing landowners at the expense of future residents, and a financial system that treats housing as an investment asset rather than a social good.
Solution:
DDS proposes a National Housing Programme with the following core elements:
Concrete example:
In Vienna, Austria, approximately 60% of residents live in either public housing or cooperative housing at subsidised rents. Average rent for a two-bedroom apartment is approximately £600/month versus £1,800/month in London for comparable accommodation. Vienna is consistently rated among the world's most liveable cities. The mechanism is not magic: it is decades of sustained public investment in social housing, combined with planning powers that prevent land banking and speculative hoarding. The UK once built at this scale — 300,000+ homes per year in the 1950s and 1960s — and can do so again with political will.
Diagnosis:
The Universal Credit system is structurally punitive. The five-week wait at the start of a claim creates immediate debt and destitution for people who have suffered job loss or crisis. The taper rate (the rate at which UC is withdrawn as earnings rise) creates high effective marginal tax rates for low-income working households, acting as a poverty trap. Sanctions — the removal of benefits for administrative non-compliance — frequently punish people for circumstances beyond their control.
Solution:
Concrete example:
In Denmark, the unemployment benefit replaces approximately 90% of previous earnings for the first three months, reducing to 80% thereafter, with a maximum cap. Take-up is near-universal because the process is simple and the payment is immediate. The result is that job loss does not mean immediate destitution; people can job-search effectively rather than being forced into any available work at any wage. The Danish economy does not suffer from a disincentive problem: Danish employment rates are among the highest in Europe.
Diagnosis:
The UK has strong equality legislation (Equality Act 2010) and moderate anti-discrimination enforcement. The gap between law on paper and material outcomes for ethnic minority, disabled, and lower-income citizens remains large and in some respects is widening. Declaration of equality commitments is not sufficient.
Solution:
Diagnosis:
The Mental Health Act 1983 is archaic. Mental health care receives approximately 13% of the NHS budget despite accounting for approximately 28% of the disease burden. Waiting times for CAMHS (children and adolescent mental health services), talking therapy (IAPT), and inpatient psychiatric care are dramatically worse than for comparable physical health conditions.
Solution:
Diagnosis:
The UK's net zero target (2050) is legally binding under the Climate Change Act. The current trajectory of policy does not deliver it. The Climate Change Committee has repeatedly found the government in breach of its own legally required carbon budget. The gap between ambition and delivery is primarily a consequence of inadequate funding, political inconsistency, and the absence of a binding implementation mechanism.
Solution:
Concrete example:
The Netherlands retrofitted approximately 400,000 homes per year between 2019 and 2023 under its National Insulation Programme, using local authority delivery teams and universal entitlement. Energy poverty rates in retrofitted properties fell by an average of 70%. The UK has 29 million homes to upgrade; at 2 million per year, the task is complete by 2040. Employing the necessary workforce (estimated 500,000 retrofit engineers, plumbers, and electricians) itself represents a major economic stimulus, particularly in post-industrial regions.
Diagnosis:
UK agriculture faces a structural crisis: farmer incomes are low, the landscape is ecologically degraded (50% of UK biodiversity lost since 1970), food security is inadequate (UK produces approximately 60% of its food needs), and rural communities face declining public services and economic opportunity.
Solution:
Diagnosis:
Post-Brexit UK foreign policy has oscillated between nostalgia for an imperial past (the 'Global Britain' rhetoric) and transactional opportunism. Neither is a coherent strategy. The UK's genuine interests are best served by a foreign policy grounded in international law, multilateral cooperation, and honest assessment of comparative advantage.
Solution:
Diagnosis:
UK defence spending is approximately 2.3% of GDP, above the NATO target of 2%. However, a significant proportion of defence expenditure has been misallocated to prestige projects (the two Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carriers, for example, operate without a sufficient organic air complement), while core capabilities — cyber defence, ground forces, reserve capacity, and logistics — are under-resourced.
Solution:
Diagnosis:
The UK civil service is technically capable but has been systematically weakened by politicisation (special advisors circumventing permanent secretary authority), austerity-driven headcount reductions, and the loss of institutional memory through outsourcing. The result is a government machine less able to design and deliver complex policy.
Solution:
Diagnosis:
The UK's judiciary is genuinely independent and commands international respect. However, access to justice has been severely curtailed by the 2012-2014 Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act, which removed legal aid from most civil and family law cases. The result is that millions of people with legitimate legal claims cannot enforce their rights for lack of funds.
Solution:
|
Year |
Key Milestones |
|
Year 1 |
Health & Care Precept introduced. Citizens' Assembly on electoral reform convened. UC five-week wait abolished. SIA established. Net Zero Implementation Authority created. Civil service reforms enacted. |
|
Year 2 |
MMP referendum held. Senate transition begins. Mandatory social housing targets activated. Carbon Revenue Levy introduced. Teacher pay reform implemented. Legal aid restoration. |
|
Year 3 |
NHS waiting list begins measurable reduction. First MMP local pilots. National Housing Programme: first New Town Development Corporations designated. Energy efficiency retrofit programme launched at scale. |
|
Year 4 |
First Senate elections. University funding reform fully operational. Regional investment programme at full rate. UK-EU Veterinary and SPS agreement in force. |
|
Year 5 |
First Westminster MMP election. NHS performance targets met. Property levy reform complete. 30% of UK renewable electricity target met. Retrofit programme: 2 million homes per year rate achieved. |
|
Programme Area |
Annual Cost (£bn) |
Funding Source |
|
NHS Health & Care Precept |
40-45 |
New 3% income precept on income above £25,000 |
|
Housing Programme (social) |
15 |
Local authority borrowing + capital grant |
|
Green Transition Fund |
30 |
Carbon levy + green bonds + fossil fuel subsidy redirection |
|
Education Reform |
8 |
Education Support Grant restoration + CGT equalisation |
|
Benefits Reform |
12 |
Partially offset by reduced poverty-related NHS demand |
|
Industrial Strategy (SIA) |
5 |
Government capitalisation over 10 years |
|
Overseas Development Aid |
4 |
Return to 0.7% GNI statutory commitment |
|
Legal Aid Restoration |
0.5 |
General taxation |
|
TOTAL NEW SPENDING |
~115 |
New revenue measures estimated to yield £80-90bn; balance from borrowing for capital investment |
DDS notes that this represents a significant but not unprecedented programme of public investment. The UK borrowed substantially more during the COVID-19 pandemic for less permanent structural benefit. The fiscal case for this programme rests on two grounds: first, many measures (energy efficiency, housing supply, health prevention) reduce long-run public expenditure; second, the economic cost of not investing — continued productivity stagnation, housing crisis, NHS collapse, climate exposure — substantially exceeds the cost of investment.
This programme is not an ideological wish-list. Every proposal is based on evidence, precedent from comparable countries, or demonstrable logical necessity. Every trade-off is named honestly. Every cost is identified, and every funding mechanism is specified.
The United Kingdom is a country of extraordinary human talent, deep democratic tradition, and immense unrealised potential. Its problems — inequality, housing, NHS, productivity, regional division — are not acts of God. They are the accumulate consequences of political choices: choices to prioritise asset-holding over work, finance over industry, London over the regions, short-term electoral calculation over long-term national interest.
DirectDemocracyS proposes a different set of choices. They are not easy choices. They will encounter powerful resistance from those whose interests are served by the current arrangements. But they are the right choices — demonstrably, logically, evidentially right — and DDS trusts citizens to recognise that fact when it is presented to them honestly.
The measure of a political programme is not whether it is popular with those who benefit from the status quo. The measure is whether it is true, whether it is fair, and whether it works. By those standards, DDS believes this programme speaks for itself.
DirectDemocracyS — directdemocracys.org
Logic. Truth. Common Sense. Mutual Respect.
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