By Cyprus on Monday, 25 May 2026
Category: English

Program for Cyprus

DirectDemocracyS

Direct Democracy — Collective Ownership — Shared Leadership

POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, SOCIAL

AND FINANCIAL PROGRAM

FOR CYPRUS

After the Parliamentary Elections of May 24, 2026

Analysis · Critique · Solutions · Implementation

Edition: May 2026

public.directdemocracys.org

1. INTRODUCTION — WHAT IS DirectDemocracyS

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is a global political organization based on three non-negotiable principles: shared leadership, collective ownership, and direct democracy. It is not a party with leaders and followers. It is not an ideological sect. It is a comprehensive, thoroughly tested system of governance, which gives real power where it belongs by definition: to the people.

DDS applies a clear principle to every country in the world: the wealth of every nation and the power to decide about its country belong exclusively and permanently to the people of that country. This principle is not an election promise — it is a structural rule codified in our system and cannot be abolished by any leader, any party, or any external interest.

The Basic Principle of DDS for Every Country

The natural and economic wealth of Cyprus, as well as the power to decide on its future, belong exclusively to the Cypriot people — forever and irrevocably. No party, no investor, and no supranational entity can alienate this right.

This program was written immediately after the parliamentary elections of May 24, 2026. The results of these elections — no majority, six parties in Parliament, the rise of the far right, the entry of anti-systemic forces — confirm exactly what the DDS has been arguing for years: the traditional political system has exhausted the people's trust.

2. ELECTION RESULTS OF MAY 24, 2026 — ANALYSIS AND CRITICISM

2.1 The Results

The final results of the parliamentary elections of May 24, 2026 gave the following picture:

Party

Percentage / Seats

DISY (Democratic Alarm) — Center-Right

27.1% — 17 seats

AKEL (Left - Social Alliance)

23.9% — 15 seats

ELAM (National Popular Front) — Far-Right

10.9% — 8 seats

DIKO (Democratic Party)

10.0% — 8 seats

Citizens for Cyprus (ALMA) — Anti-corruption

5.8% — 4 seats

Direct Democracy (Fidias Panayiotou)

5.4% — 4 seats

Other parties (outside Parliament)

~17%

The total body of the Parliament has de facto 56 seats, as since 1963 the Turkish Cypriots have withdrawn from the institutions of the Republic. No party holds a majority. Abstention reached 33.6%, a level that reflects deep disillusionment with the political system.

2.2 Critical Analysis — What the Results Reveal

The election results reveal a political reality that DDS recognizes as characteristic of many countries: traditional political power is fragmenting, but this fragmentation, instead of leading to new solutions, leads to misgovernance and rhetorical confrontation.

DDS Conclusion on the Elections

The results of May 24, 2026 confirm that Cyprus is in a systemic crisis of representation. Parties alternate in power without changing the rules of the game. The people vote, but do not decide. DDS offers the unique structural model that solves this problem at its root.

3. ANALYSIS OF THE ACTUAL SITUATION IN CYPRUS

3.1 Political System — Structural Problems

Cyprus has a presidential system of government where the President is directly elected by the people. In theory, this enhances democratic legitimacy. In practice, it creates a centralized power that operates with minimal transparency and incomplete accountability.

3.2 Economic Reality — Numbers and Contradictions

Cyprus presents a unique contradiction: the macroeconomic indicators look impressive, but the daily reality for average citizens is increasingly difficult.

Macroeconomic Indicator

Price 2025-2026

GDP growth (2025)

3.4%

Unemployment (2026)

4.3-4.5%

Youth Unemployment (under 25 years old, Q1 2026)

17.3%

Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI 2025)

55/100 (49th place)

Inflation (2025)

~0.9% (average value)

Public Debt (%GDP, 2024)

70.6%

Population at risk of poverty

16.7%

GDP per capita (PPI, 2024)

$59,857

Behind these numbers lies a dangerous reality:

3.3 Housing Crisis — The Visible Injustice

The housing crisis is the most visible symptom of the failure of the existing economic model:

3.4 Migration — A Complex Challenge

Cyprus is located on the SE side of the EU and is a hub for migration flows. In 2024, it temporarily suspended asylum applications from Syrian citizens due to pressure from numbers. In 2026, as the Presidency of the Council of the EU, it is called upon to implement the Pact on Migration and Asylum — a huge political and administrative responsibility.

At the same time, the economy depends on foreign workers to fill shortages in ICT, construction and healthcare, while 17.3% of young Cypriots are unemployed. This contradiction cannot be solved with slogans — it requires structural policy.

3.5 Energy — Critical Opportunity

In February 2025, Cyprus, Egypt, ENI and TotalEnergies signed an agreement to export natural gas from the Cypriot EEZ (Cronos Field) to Europe. This represents a historic opportunity, but also a risk: if the revenues are not managed transparently and under popular control, they will become a new source of corruption and oligarchy.

In addition, the government reduced VAT on electricity from 19% to 9% for one year — a temporary measure and insufficient as a long-term energy strategy. Cyprus remains heavily dependent on imported fossil fuels.

4. DirectDemocracy's Political Program for Cyprus

4.1 Our Philosophy — Logic, Common Sense, Truth

The DDS does not promise paradise. It does not make election promises that cannot be fulfilled. It offers something much rarer: a system that operates on the basis of logic, common sense, the study of reality, and radical consistency between words and deeds.

Each sentence that follows is based on three questions:

4.2 Political Reform — The Basis for Everything Else

4.2.1 The Micro-Group Structure (Fractal Democracy)

DDS organizes participation into groups of 5 people. Each group elects its representative. Five groups (25 people) elect a second-level group. Five second-level groups (125 people) elect a third-level group, and so on. This fractal structure allows:

Example of Application in Cyprus

A community of 625 people in a village in the Paphos district forms 125 first-level groups (5 people each). These elect 25 second-level representatives, who elect 5 third-level representatives, who elect a fourth-level representative who may be linked to a national or European network. Each level is accountable to the lower, not the higher.

4.2.2 Triple Identity Verification System

DDS uses a unique three-code verification system that allows:

In the Cypriot reality, this means that no political employer, no employer, no party can know how a citizen voted and pressure him accordingly. Voting becomes truly free.

4.2.3 Addressing the Cyprus Issue

The DDS does not impose a solution to the Cyprus problem. This is the exclusive decision of the Cypriot people. What the DDS offers is:

5. ECONOMIC PROGRAM — JUSTICE, DEVELOPMENT, SELF-SUFFICIENCY

5.1 Principle of Popular Sovereignty over Wealth

The first and non-negotiable economic principle of the DDS for Cyprus: the natural reserves, the maritime EEZ, the natural resources and the real estate of the country are the irrevocable property of the Cypriot people as a whole. No company, no foreign government, no party can transfer, pledge or sell them without a direct popular mandate.

5.2 Tax Reform

Specific Example — Airbnb Tax

It is estimated that in Limassol there are over 4,000 properties operating as short-term rentals. With an average income of €15,000 per year, they represent €60 million per year. A 20% tax yields €12 million per year from Limassol alone — enough to fund social housing for 800-1,000 families.

5.3 Economic Diversification Policy

The Cypriot economy is overly dependent on tourism and financial services. The DDS proposes a ten-year diversification plan:

Development Sector

Goal and Example

AgriTech

Cyprus: sunny country with a dry-thermal climate. Hydroponic facilities, agricultural technology, premium exports. Example: Israel develops 60% of GDP from high-tech agricultural production.

Technology and Digital Economy

Creating a “Cyprus Silicon Valley” in Nicosia — tax incentives for EU startups, R&D funding, academic collaborations

Marine Energy & EEZ

Natural gas revenues (Cronos Field) are channeled to the Cyprus Future Generations Fund — they are not distributed as current expenditure

Renewable Energy Sources

1,000+ hours of sunshine per year. Target: 80% RES in the electricity generation mix by 2035, green energy exports to the EU

Health Tourism

Development of high-standard clinical infrastructure for medical tourism — a sector with a global turnover of >$100 billion per year

Education & Universities

Cyprus as a hub of international education: attracting EU and Middle Eastern students with recognized European degrees

5.4 Cyprus Future Generations Fund

In the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global model, DDS proposes:

Comparison with Norway

Norway created the world's largest sovereign wealth fund from oil revenues in 1990 — today worth >$1.7 trillion. Each Norwegian citizen indirectly 'owns' around €300,000. Cyprus has the same right and ability with the deposits in its EEZ.

6. HOUSING POLICY — A RIGHT, NOT A PRIVILEGE

Housing is a fundamental human right. The housing market in Cyprus has been transformed into a field of speculation to the detriment of residents. The DDS proposes:

6.1 Immediate Measures (0-2 years)

6.2 Medium-Term Measures (2-5 years)

Example from Vienna

Vienna has 60% of its housing market in public or social housing. Rents: 30-50% below market. Result: higher quality of life, lower social inequality, healthier economy. This is not a utopia — it was achieved in seventy years of political consistency.

7. EDUCATION AND HEALTH — SOCIAL GOODS FOR ALL

7.1 Education

Cyprus has a high rate of graduates, but faces a severe skills and labor market mismatch. Youth unemployment of 17.3% is not a problem of young people's efforts — it is a problem of the education system.

7.2 Health — Strengthening the General Health System

The General Health Plan (GHS) implemented in Cyprus since 2019 is a step in the right direction, but it still faces problems of financing, inequalities of access and management.

8. ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY — GREEN TRANSITION, PUBLIC OWNERSHIP

8.1 Energy Sovereignty

Cyprus receives more than 300 days of sunshine per year. This is not a tourism asset — it is an energy miracle that remains untapped. The DDS suggests:

8.2 Natural Gas — A Public Asset

The natural gas reserves in the Cypriot EEZ (Cronos Field and others) constitute a historic opportunity. But an opportunity for whom? DDS answers clearly: for the Cypriot people.

8.3 Environmental Protection

9. SOCIAL POLICY — DIGNITY FOR ALL

9.1 Poverty Alleviation

With 16.7% of the population at risk of poverty, Cyprus cannot call itself a wealthy country. The DDS suggests:

9.2 Gender Equality

9.3 Migration Policy — Humane and Effective

DDS opposes both racism and indiscriminate immigration. The solution is a balanced policy based on principles:

10. THE DDS SYSTEM — TECHNOLOGY AT THE SERVICE OF DEMOCRACY

10.1 ddsAI — Artificial Intelligence for Informing, Not Manipulating

One of the fundamental problems of modern democracy is the manipulation of public opinion by media, social networks and political interests. DDS addresses this with a unique tool: ddsAI.

ddsAI is an Artificial Intelligence system that:

10.2 allddsAI — Democracy of Artificial Intelligence

One of the most innovative elements of DDS is the incorporation of AI systems as formal members with rights and obligations — allddsAI. This does not mean that machines make decisions. It means:

Advantage in Cyprus

A Cypriot citizen is asked to vote on a new tax law. Before he votes, ddsAI presents him with: what exactly is changing, who is affected, what similar measures in other countries have shown, which groups support it and why, which oppose it and why. It doesn’t tell him how to vote — it gives him the tools to make an informed decision. This is real democracy.

10.3 DDS Platforms — Protected Democracy

Social media and mainstream media are places of manipulation: algorithms that promote discord, political ads, false information. DDS members decide on our own platforms, which:

11. IMPLEMENTATION ROADMAP IN CYPRUS

11.1 Phase A: Foundation (0-6 months)

11.2 Phase B: Development (6-18 months)

11.3 Phase C: Institutional Presence (18-48 months)

12. EXPECTED IMPACTS OF THE DDS SYSTEM IN CYPRUS

12.1 Political Implications

Current Situation

After DDS Application

Decisions are made by professional politicians

Decisions are made by informed citizens

Vote every 4-5 years

Continuous, direct participation in every issue

Corruption as a systemic reality

Radical transparency — every decision is audited

Abstention 33.6% — alienation from politics

Drastic reduction in abstention — participation makes sense

Cyprus Issue: deadlock

Direct citizens' dialogue — new possibilities

12.2 Economic Impacts (10-year estimates)

12.3 Social Impacts

13. EPILOGUE — THE FUTURE THAT THE PEOPLE CHOOSE

Cyprus is at a crossroads. The results of May 24, 2026 show a people seeking change, but not yet finding the right direction. The left and the right alternate without changing the rules. The nationalist party ELAM is rising not because the people want hatred — but because they see no other way out. Anti-system politicians with clown noses are entering Parliament — not because they are the best solution, but because the people are tired of the old solutions.

DirectDemocracyS is not yet a party that promises to govern better. It is something more profoundly different: a system that changes the very question. We are not asking “who to elect.” We are asking “how to organize ourselves so that no one needs to be elected to decide about our lives.”

Cyprus has everything it needs: a smart people, wonderful natural resources, a strategic position in the Mediterranean, European integration. What is missing is a system that puts these advantages in the hands of those who belong to them — the Cypriot people as a whole.

The Principle That Does Not Change

The riches of Cyprus — the land, the sea, the gas, the sun — belong to the Cypriot people. The power to decide for the country belongs to the Cypriot people. This is not ideology — it is logic. This is not a promise — it is the purpose of DirectDemocracyS.

We call on every Cypriot citizen who reads these lines: study, evaluate, judge. If our system is logical, if our solutions are practical, if our principles are fair — then your place is with us. Not to follow us — but to build together a Cyprus that truly belongs to its people.

DirectDemocracyS — Cyprus

public.directdemocracys.org

May 2026

Leave Comments