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DirectDemocracyS

Global System of Direct Democracy

www.directdemocracys.org

COMPREHENSIVE POLITICAL PROGRAM

FOR THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA

2025 – 2030

Analysis of the actual situation • Criticism of the existing system • Concrete and functional reforms

Implementation of the DirectDemocracyS system • ddsAI & allddsAI technologies • Wealth in the hands of the people

Logic • Common Sense • Truth • Competence • Mutual Respect

The document is protected and intended for all citizens of the Republic of Croatia.

FOREWORD: WHY THIS PROGRAM IS DIFFERENT

Every political party promises change. Every government claims to work in the interest of citizens. Every election brings new faces with the same old promises. And each time, in the end, nothing fundamentally changes. Wealth remains in the hands of the minority, power remains in the hands of party structures, and the people remain spectators in a game in which they are never real players.

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) does not just offer a different program – it offers a different system. A system that is not conceived as a new party that comes to power, but as a tool that permanently returns power to the people and keeps it there. A system that does not depend on a good or bad president, prime minister or minister, because power in DDS is not personalized – it is collective, continuous, transparent and verifiable.

This document analyzes the real situation in the Republic of Croatia – without embellishment and without populism – and offers concrete, logical, functional solutions for each identified problem. Each solution is accompanied by a description of its implementation, expected consequences, and an example from real life or comparative practice.

"The wealth of every country and the power to decide about that country must forever remain in the hands of the people. This is not an ideological slogan – it is the only logical and just order of human society." — DirectDemocracyS

 

1. THE ACTUAL SITUATION OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA: OBJECTIVE ANALYSIS

1.1 The political landscape after the 2024–2025 "super-election" cycle

In 2024 and 2025, Croatia went through an electoral marathon that included parliamentary elections (April 2024), European elections (May 2024), presidential elections (December 2024 – January 2025), and local elections (May 2025). The results of these elections reveal several key, worrying trends.

1.1.1 HDZ dominance and the structure of the captured democratic space

The Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) remains the absolute dominant political force. After the local elections in June 2025, the HDZ retained control of most counties and cities. Prime Minister Andrej Plenković emerged as the clear political winner of the entire election cycle, despite losing the presidential election.

The paradox is the following: HDZ controls the government, controls the parliament, controls the presidents of most counties and cities. The only institution that escaped him was the Presidency of the Republic, but since Croatia is a parliamentary democracy in which presidential powers are not executive, this division has no essential democratic weight.

PROBLEMS AND WEAKNESSES

CONTEXT AND RESOURCES

HDZ 35+ years of dominance without substantial change

Strong local roots enable the constant reproduction of power

Party clientelism in public administration

Formal democratic infrastructure exists (laws, institutions)

Conflict between the President and the Prime Minister (Milanović vs. Plenković)

Croatia is the only CEE country with a president who openly criticizes the government

Low turnout (below 45% local, ~60% parliamentary)

Civil society shows growth in activism (boycotts, protests 2025)

Absence of alternative programs – only personality

Young voters increasingly reject traditional parties

Corruption and nepotism in the management of public goods

The European integration framework provides external pressure on standards

Lack of parliamentary control over the executive branch

Schengen and eurozone integration (2023) provide a new framework for development

1.1.2 Crisis of trust in institutions

Public opinion surveys consistently show that the Croatian population does not trust the parliament, the government, the judiciary or the media. This structural deficit of trust is not accidental - it is the product of decades of disappointment, corruption scandals and the feeling that politics is taking place without and without the people.

Symptom: In February 2025, the consumer platform "Hello, Inspector" launched a spontaneous boycott of stores and gas stations due to high prices. The stores were empty for days. That's the message: the people react when they have had enough. The problem is that this energy does not find a systematic channel - it comes, hits, and passes without change.

1.2 Economic situation: growth on fragile foundations

1.2.1 Macroeconomic indicators

On the surface, Croatia is recording one of the higher growth rates in the eurozone: GDP is growing at around 3.2% (2025), unemployment is at a historic low of 4.6%, and the country successfully entered the eurozone and the Schengen area in 2023. But behind these positive indicators lie serious structural weaknesses that threaten prosperity in the long term.

Indicator

Value

Comment

GDP (nominal)

~93 billion USD (2024)

Growth, but mainly from tourism and EU funds

GDP per capita

~24,050 USD / year.

Significantly below the EU average

Inflation (2025)

3.82%

Higher than the EU average (2.18%)

Unemployment

4.6% (2025)

Historical minimum, but a problem of inactivity

Public debt

<60% of GDP (2025)

Positive trend, but deficits are growing

Fiscal deficit

~2.9% of GDP (2025–26)

IMF warns of inflation risk

Corruption index

53/100 (64th place)

Chronic problem, no progress

Population

3.87 million (down -9.6% since 2011)

Demographic crisis

1.2.2 Tourism as an addiction, not a support

The Croatian economy depends on tourism, which accounts for 20-25% of GDP. This hyper-specialization means that the entire country is vulnerable to seasonal fluctuations, climate change, geopolitical shocks and competition from Mediterranean destinations. The Adriatic coast is a precious resource – but its management must not be in the hands of a few private interests with the blessing of politics.

1.2.3 Fiscal irresponsibility and inflationary pressures

In 2025, the International Monetary Fund and the OECD clearly warned: the Croatian government is implementing an expansive fiscal policy at a time when the economy is growing, which increases inflation and reduces competitiveness. Public expenditures are growing (salary reform of public servants, increase in social benefits, energy subsidies), but without a corresponding structural reform that would ensure long-term fiscal sustainability.

OECD (2026): "A return to fiscal prudence is needed to support disinflation, rebuild fiscal reserves, and prepare for long-term pressures." The Croatian government has not demonstrated the capacity for such prudence without external pressure.

1.3 Social situation: an invisible crisis

1.3.1 Demographic catastrophe and mass emigration

Between the 2011 and 2021 censuses, Croatia lost almost 10% of its population – more than 400,000 people. This is not a statistic – this is a civilizational loss. Young, educated, highly educated Croats are leaving the country en masse because they see no future in it: lower salaries than in Western Europe, higher cost of living, a corrupt system that ties advancement to party affiliation rather than competence.

1.3.2 Housing: the affordability crisis

Real estate prices in Croatian cities, especially in Zagreb, Split, Rijeka and coastal areas, have reached levels that are completely unaffordable for the average household. The average net salary in Croatia is around EUR 1,100-1,200, while a square meter in Zagreb costs EUR 3,000-4,500, and in Split EUR 4,000-6,000. A young couple with an average income cannot buy an apartment without a twenty-year loan and family help.

1.3.3 Health system: on the edge

The Croatian healthcare system is financed by around 7% of GDP, close to the European average – but the distribution and quality of services vary dramatically between Zagreb and the peripheral regions. The lack of specialist doctors in rural areas is a chronic problem. Salaries for healthcare workers, despite recent reforms, remain insufficient to retain experts who leave for Austria, Germany and Scandinavia. Waiting lists for specialist and surgical treatment are measured in years.

1.3.4 Education: falling behind in the 21st century

The Croatian education system is undergoing chronic reforms that never end and do not bring about substantial change. The implementation of the Comprehensive Curriculum Reform (CCR) has met with institutional resistance. The digitalization of teaching is insufficient. The connection between the education system and the needs of the labor market is weak. Higher education institutions do not have sufficient capacity for research and innovation.

1.4 The root of all problems: the democratic deficit

All of the above problems – economic dependency, demographic collapse, fiscal irresponsibility, corruption, inadequate health and educational infrastructure – have a common root: a system in which the people formally vote, but do not really decide. Power is aggregated in parties, party apparatuses, a network of clientelism and interest groups that use politics as a tool for their own enrichment and the reproduction of privileges.

Fundamental question: When was the last time the citizens of Croatia directly decided on a specific law, budget item, or national strategy? Never. It is not a democracy - it is an elected oligarchy that changes every few years and reproduces the same mistakes.

 

2. CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF EXISTING PARTIES AND ALTERNATIVES

2.1 Why the previous parties have not solved the fundamental problems

It is worth understanding why no Croatian political party, regardless of ideological affiliation, has managed to solve Croatia's structural problems. The reason is not (only) ill will or incompetence - the reason lies in the very architecture of the system of representative democracy in the form in which it exists in Croatia.

2.1.1 HDZ (Croatian Democratic Union)

2.1.2 SDP (Social Democratic Party)

2.1.3 We can!

2.1.4 Homeland Movement and the Right

2.2 A structural problem shared by all parties

All parties, without exception, share the same fundamental problem: they are tools of power, not tools of the people. As soon as a party comes to power, it begins to reproduce the same pattern: party patronage, rewards to loyal supporters, punitive treatment of opponents, media control or alliances. This is not a coincidence - this is a logical consequence of a system in which power is not structurally anchored in the people, but in the parties.

DDS solution: A system in which parties and leaders do not have a monopoly on decision-making. A system in which every citizen, permanently and continuously, participates in making decisions that affect their lives. This is not a utopia – this is a technically feasible reality.

 

3. DIRECTDEMOCRACYS SYSTEM: FOUNDATIONS AND ARCHITECTURE

3.1 What is DirectDemocracy?

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is a global political system and organization based on shared leadership and collective ownership logic. Each official member of DDS holds one unique, non-transferable share in the organization. There are no shareholders who earn from other people's work. There are no leaders who can make decisions without control. There is a collective that works, decides and supervises together.

3.1.1 Core values of DDS

3.2 Fractal structure of micro-groups

DDS uses a fractal organizational architecture that allows scaling from the individual to the global level without losing democratic quality. Each new member enters a micro-group of 5 members. Each micro-group of 5 has a representative who goes to level 25, each level of 25 to level 125, and so on.

Level

Size

Name

Function

Level 1

5 members

Basic micro-group

Everyday communication, local initiatives

Level 2

25 members

Micro-group of groups

Thematic coordination, local programs

Level 3

125 members

Meso-group

Regional programs, specialist projects

Level 4

625 members

Macro-group

National coordination

Level 5+

3125+

Continental / global

International coordination and support

This structure ensures that every member always has a voice, that decisions made at higher levels reflect the will of the grassroots, and that there is no possibility of usurpation of power by a small number of individuals.

3.3 System of triple identification code

DDS has developed a unique verification system that solves the paradox between anonymity and identity: each member has three codes. One personal one that is never shared, one that is shared with DDS for identification, and one public one that is used in communication. This system prevents multiple identities, vote manipulation, and impersonation, while protecting the member's privacy.

3.4 Five special groups available to all members

Membership in one or more of five special groups covering key areas is available to each official member:

3.5 allddsAI and ddsAI: Democracy assisted by Artificial Intelligence

DDS has developed a unique approach to integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into the democratic process. Unlike corporate AI systems that serve profit, or government AI that serves control, DDS's AI systems (ddsAI and allddsAI) have an explicit mission: to inform users completely, accurately, neutrally, and independently.

3.5.1 ddsAI – AI for all members

3.5.2 allddsAI – Democracy of AI Instances

3.6 Anti-Manipulation Platform

DDS's digital platform is designed with one primary goal: to protect citizens from manipulation. Mass media, social networks, algorithmic bubbles, and paid disinformation campaigns are powerful tools for controlling public opinion. DDS Platform:

 

4. DEMOCRATIC REFORM: RETURNING POWER TO THE PEOPLE

4.1 Implementation of direct democracy in the Croatian context

The Croatian Constitution foresees the possibility of referendums and popular initiatives, but these possibilities are blocked in practice by high thresholds, short deadlines and institutional inertia. DDS does not propose only occasional referendums - it proposes continuous, everyday democracy.

4.1.1 Concrete implementation steps in the Republic of Croatia

  1. Establishing DDS micro-groups in every city and municipality in Croatia – goal: 100 micro-groups (500 active members) in the first year
  2. Registration of DDS as a political party/movement in accordance with Croatian legislation
  3. Participation in local elections (city councils, municipal councils) – the local level is a laboratory for proving the functioning of the system
  4. Each DDS elected official undertakes to vote as ordered by his voters, not by the party - transparently, with public records
  5. Introducing digital tools for participatory budgeting at the local community level
  6. Launching public consultations on every important law and city project via the DDS platform

4.1.2 Direct mandate model – without party discipline

Each elected DDS official signs a contract with the voters, not with the party leadership. In the case of a vote of no confidence by the micro-group that elected him/her, the mandate is revoked. This is the only way for elected officials to stop being servants of the party and become real representatives of the people.

Example: In the cities of Porto (Portugal) and Barcelona (Spain), the cities have introduced digital participatory budgets in which all citizens vote on the distribution of a portion of the budget. In Barcelona, the so-called "Decidim" platform has mobilized tens of thousands of citizens to directly decide on city projects. DDS uses the same approach but systematizes it and integrates it into everyday democratic life.

4.2 Transparency and the fight against corruption

4.2.1 Public declaration of assets and conflicts of interest

4.2.2 Independent anti-corruption body

4.2.3 Digital platform for monitoring public contracts and procurement

DDS proposes the introduction of a single public register of all contracts and public procurement that would be available in real time, with automatic warnings about repetition of the same company, family ties and unusual prices. ddsAI would continuously analyze anomalies and warn the public and the judiciary.

 

5. ECONOMIC PROGRAM: THE WEALTH REMAINS IN THE HANDS OF THE PEOPLE

5.1 Basic philosophy: common equity vs. privatized natural resources

DDS advocates neither communism nor liberal capitalism in their pure forms. DDS advocates a system in which natural resources (sea, land, forests, minerals, groundwater), infrastructure (roads, networks, energy networks) and strategic enterprises remain owned and controlled by the people – with market competition in the sphere of private enterprise.

Principle: What the people cannot build themselves, and which nature has given to all generations, must not be a subject of private ownership that excludes the people from benefiting. The Adriatic coast belongs to all Croatians – present and future. Its revenues must reflect this.

5.2 Reform of the management of natural resources

5.2.1 Marine and coastal zone

Croatia's Adriatic coast and islands are a public good that should be managed for the benefit of all citizens, not privileged tenants or well-connected private investors.

5.2.2 Energy sector and renewable sources

Croatia has an extraordinary potential in solar, wind and hydropower that is dramatically underutilized. The DDS proposes a national energy plan based on collective ownership of renewable capacities.

Example (Iceland/Denmark): Denmark has built one of the most advanced renewable energy networks in Europe through the energy cooperative model. Local residents own the wind turbines, pay less for electricity, and the communities are profit-independent. DDS can apply this to Croatia.

5.3 Tax system reform

5.3.1 Current problems

5.3.2 DDS tax reforms

Tax

Current situation

DDS reform

Expected effect

VAT

25% flat

Reduced to 19% for basic needs, 25% for luxury - progressivism

Greater purchasing power, less pressure on the poor

Income tax

Low progressivity

3 grades: 0% to 1.5x min. wage; 25% to 5x; 35% above 5x min. wage.

Fair distribution, stronger incentives for the lower class

Real estate tax

Minimal / inefficient

Progressive according to the number and value of properties; liberated primary home

Speculation discouraged, more revenue for local communities

Capital gains tax

10%

20% for short-term (under 2 years) investments, 10% for long-term

Reducing speculation, encouraging long-term investments

Gray economy

~20-25% of GDP

Digitalization of payments, incentives for reporting, penalty framework

Billions in additional revenue for public services

5.4 Diversification of the economy: a way out of the tourist trap

5.4.1 Digital and creative economy

5.4.2 Green and bioeconomy agenda

5.4.3 Reindustrialization and the Port of Rijeka

5.5 Public enterprises and collective ownership

DDS supports a model in which strategic public enterprises (HEP, HŽ, Croatia Airlines, port authorities) remain in public ownership, but are managed professionally, transparently and meritocratically, without party interference. Management boards are elected through competitive processes with public participation – they are not appointed as a reward for party loyalty.

 

6. DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIAL POLICY: STAYING AND RETURNING

6.1 Strategy to stop emigration

There is no one magic move that stops emigration. There is a package of measures that together change the economic calculus for young and educated Croats. DDS proposes the National Pact for Stay - an agreement between institutions, employers and communities to create conditions in which staying in Croatia is not a sacrifice, but a reasonable decision.

6.1.1 Salaries and purchasing power

6.1.2 Housing policy for youth

6.1.3 Diaspora Return Program

6.2 Demographic policy

6.2.1 Family and parenting

6.2.2 Population aging and the pension system

6.3 Health system: reform for the 21st century

6.3.1 Problem diagnosis

The Croatian healthcare system suffers from three structural problems: insufficient salaries for healthcare workers (who are leaving for the West), regional inequalities in access to healthcare, and chronically long waiting lists. The DDS proposes a comprehensive reform that addresses each of these problems.

6.3.2 DDS health reforms

Example: Estonia built a fully digital healthcare system in 15 years that reduces administrative burden by 60%, eliminates duplication and gives patients full control over their own data. Croatia can learn from this model.

 

7. EDUCATION: REFORM FOR THE FUTURE GENERATION

7.1 Diagnosis

The Croatian education system remains in the mental architecture of the 20th century: memorization of information, uniform curriculum, weak connection with the labor market and research capacities. The curriculum reform (CKR) is being implemented, but is slowed down by institutional resistance, insufficient teacher education and chronic underfunding.

7.2 DDS educational reforms

7.2.1 Primary and secondary school

7.2.2 Higher education and research

7.2.3 Lifelong learning

 

8. FINANCIAL POLICY: FISCAL FAIRNESS AND LONG-TERM STABILITY

8.1 Budget reform: participatory budgeting

The budget of the Republic of Croatia is passed in the Parliament, far from the eyes and understanding of the average citizen. DDS proposes a revolution in the way the budget is passed: participatory budgeting, which is mandatory at the local level and recommended at the national level.

8.2 Struggle with public debt and fiscal irresponsibility

8.3 Banking sector and credit availability

 

9. ENVIRONMENT AND CLIMATE POLICY: CROATIA AS A GREEN PIONEER

9.1 The climate crisis is not an ideology - it is physics

Croatia is a Mediterranean country and is already feeling the effects of climate change: hotter and drier summers, increased frequency of storms, rising sea levels that threaten coastal areas. Ignoring this problem is not an option – it is a form of criminal negligence towards future generations.

9.2 DDS Green Agenda

Example: Costa Rica is a country of similar size and tourism economy that has reached 99% renewable electricity. Slovenia, the same size as Croatia, is more successful in terms of forest and green capacity. Croatia can and must follow these examples.

 

10. REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT: THE END OF DEPOPULATION IN THE INTERIOR

10.1 Disparities that kill the community

Croatia suffers from chronic regional inequalities: Zagreb and the Adriatic prosper, Slavonia, Lika, Banovina and the Dalmatian hinterland empty out. This polarization is neither natural nor inevitable – it is the result of decades of policies that favor the centers of power.

10.2 DDS regional policy

 

11. RULE OF LAW AND JUDICIAL REFORM

11.1 State of the judiciary: slower than a tortoise

The Croatian judiciary suffers from chronic overload, lengthy proceedings and a perception of partisan bias. Verdicts are unpredictable, processes last for years and decades. This is not only an injustice to citizens – it is an economic drag because investors do not want to enter a system with uncertain legal frameworks.

11.2 DDS judicial reforms

 

12. FOREIGN POLICY AND EU INTEGRATION

12.1 Croatia in the EU and NATO: not just a consumer, but a creator

Croatia is a full member of the EU and NATO, and will join the eurozone and Schengen in 2023. These are strategic achievements that must be a platform for Croatia's more active role in European processes, not just a corridor for obtaining EU funds.

12.2 DDS foreign policy program

12.3 DDS Global Vision

DDS operates globally – the same principles apply in every country. Croatia is not only a country where DDS implements the program, but also a partner in the global network of direct democracy. Every local successful implementation in Croatia sends a signal to other countries that the system is functional and applicable.

 

13. IMPLEMENTATION: PLAN FOR THE FIRST 5 YEARS

13.1 Phase 1: Foundation (2025–2026)

This phase focuses on building organizational infrastructure and initial visibility.

  1. Establishment of DDS-HR: formal registration of DDS as a party/movement in accordance with Croatian party laws
  2. Digital platform: launching a DDS platform tailored to Croatian users – in Croatian, with technical support
  3. 50 micro-groups: priority in Split, Zagreb, Rijeka, Osijek and Dubrovnik
  4. Special groups: formation of all five special groups headed by domestic experts
  5. Media presence: communication strategy, DDS channels on all relevant platforms, no paid advertising – only content
  6. Educational program: workshops in cities on DDS, on participatory democracy, on ddsAI tools

13.2 Phase 2: Local Presence (2026–2027)

  1. Participation in local elections: candidacies for city councils in 10+ cities
  2. Participatory budgets: pilot in 3 local communities where DDS has councilors
  3. Visible results: transparency of voting, public records, participatory processes that the media can monitor
  4. Micro-group growth: goal of 300 micro-groups – 1,500 active members

13.3 Phase 3: National relevance (2027–2029)

  1. Parliamentary elections 2027: DDS enters with full lists at the national level
  2. Coalition according to the program: DDS is not looking for power - it is looking for the implementation of specific reforms. We negotiate with whoever accepts our program.
  3. Legislative initiatives: each DDS representative brings forward a proposal from their sector, in cooperation with special groups
  4. Anti-corruption agenda: public database of contracts, property cards and voting records as a legislative priority

13.4 Phase 4: Consolidation (2029–2030)

  1. Evaluation of all implemented measures – publicly available report
  2. Revision of the program based on actual results - the DDS program is not a dogma but a living document
  3. Preparing for the next election cycle with richer experience and a longer mandate
  4. Spreading the DDS model to neighboring countries - Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro - where there are DDS groups

 

14. ANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES: WHAT CROATIA GETS

14.1 Short-term consequences (1–3 years)

14.2 Medium-term consequences (3–7 years)

14.3 Long-term consequences (10+ years)

"The question is not whether we can afford these reforms. The question is whether we can afford not to implement them. Every year of delay costs us people, capital, trust and the future." — DirectDemocracyS

 

CONCLUSION: THE CROATIA WE DESERVE

This program is not a utopia. Every measure proposed here has a competing example in some part of Europe or the world. Every solution is logical, based on data, and feasible within the existing institutional framework. The difference is one thing: is there a political will that comes from the people, not from party apparatuses?

DirectDemocracyS in the Republic of Croatia does not ask for trust in a person. It asks for trust in the system: in transparency, in logic, in mutual respect. It asks every Croatian to stop being a spectator in democracy and become its active participant.

Each of the 3.87 million Croats has the right to a healthy sea, clean air, affordable housing, quality education, a dignified retirement and healthcare. Each of them has the right to know how every kuna of their tax money is spent. And each of them has the right to vote, not just once every four years, but continuously, competently and protected.

That's not revolution. That's logic.

DIRECT. CONTINUOUS. COMPETENT. PROTECTED.

AUTHENTIC DEMOCRACY. CROATIA IS YOURS.

www.directdemocracys.org

DirectDemocracyS — Global System of Direct Democracy

The program is a living document that is continuously updated through participatory processes. Version: May 2025.