By Morocco on Tuesday, 16 June 2026
Category: English

Program for Morocco

DirectDemocracyS

Global Direct Democracy

Morocco's Comprehensive National Program

Politics · Economics · Finance · Society · Direct Democracy

A comprehensive analysis of the current situation and an integrated program for democratic transition

Prepared by: DirectDemocracyS — The Global System for Direct Democracy

In collaboration with: allddsAI — Independent and neutral artificial intelligence

2025 - 2026

Introduction: A message to the Moroccan people

Fellow Moroccan citizens, this program is not an election promise, nor a party manifesto, nor political propaganda. It is a document built on facts, analysis of reality, reason, sound logic, and mutual respect. It is a message from a global movement—DirectDemocracy—to every citizen of Morocco, regardless of their religion, language, region, or political beliefs.

Morocco's resources—phosphates, tourism, agriculture, solar energy, beaches, and human ingenuity—belong to the Moroccan people, and to the Moroccan people alone. This is not merely a slogan: it is a legal, ethical, and practical principle that we defend and apply in every country in the world without exception.

We do not want to export a foreign model. We offer tools, a methodology, technology, and an organizational structure that empower the Moroccan people to decide for themselves—on every issue, at every level—what they want for their country and their children. Amazigh, Arab, Sahrawi, and Moroccans everywhere: your future begins with your true power.

Part One: Diagnosis — The Current Political Reality

1.1 Monarchy and the Concentration of Power

Officially, Morocco presents itself as a democratic constitutional monarchy. On paper, there is a multi-party system, parliamentary elections are held regularly, and the 2011 reforms—under pressure from the February 20 Movement and the Arab Spring—allowed for a degree of constitutional liberalization. However, reality paints a more complex and problematic picture.

A 2025 report by Freedom House found that King Mohammed VI and his royal palace maintain complete dominance through extensive formal powers, an informal network of influence within the state and society, and control over major economic resources. The judiciary is not independent of the king, who heads the Supreme Council of the Judiciary. The courts are regularly used to punish dissidents and human rights defenders.

Index

Documented reality

freedom of expression

Restricted — Criticizing the monarchy, Islam, and territorial integrity is a crime punishable by law.

Judicial independence

The king heads the Supreme Judicial Council — the judiciary is an instrument of power, not a check on it.

Freedom of the press

Widespread self-censorship — arrests of journalists and bloggers — "fake news" laws used to silence dissent

Elections

It takes place regularly, but real power remains in the hands of the palace, not the elected government.

Internet monitoring

Freedom House: Internet freedom is waning — widespread surveillance and arrests over social media posts

corruption

Morocco is implicated in the European "Qatargate" scandal of 2022 — the monarchy and its associated economic interests are beyond scrutiny.

1.2 Concrete examples of funnels

1.3 Explicit Evaluation

The indisputable conclusion: Morocco is not a democracy in the true sense of the word. It is a clever semi-autocratic system that combines the trappings of elections and sham institutions with real power centralized in the hands of the king and his economic and judicial apparatus. The Moroccan people vote, but they do not govern. Their voices are sometimes heard, but they are only heeded when they align with the will of the palace.

Part Two: Economic and Financial Diagnosis

2.1 The digital image of the Moroccan economy

Index

Value/Reality 2024-2025

GDP growth

3.2% (2024) — expected 3.9% (2025) — IMF

overall unemployment rate

13.3% (January 2025)

Youth unemployment

Over 35% — a generational catastrophe

poverty

Decline from 12% (2014) to 6.8% (2024) — real progress, but not enough

car production

559,645 units 2024 — Approaching Italy — Emerging industrial sector

Phosphate

Morocco possesses 70% of the world's reserves — a crucial strategic asset

Tourism

A key growing sector — with pressure on infrastructure

Renewable energy

Ambitious projects (Noor Ouarzazate) but energy does not reach everyone equally

2.2 The stark contradiction: growth without justice

The Moroccan economy is characterized by a dual growth model: in major cities like Casablanca, Rabat, and Marrakech, a modern economy thrives, capable of regional and international competition, with industries including automotive, aerospace, and digital services. However, behind this facade, rural areas suffer from extreme poverty and a lack of basic services, while youth unemployment is rising to levels that threaten social stability.

Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch promised 350,000 new jobs and a reduction in unemployment to below 9%. The result: unemployment has reached nearly 13%, and youth unemployment has exceeded 35%. The government's response? To blame the unemployment on... drought. This excuse conveniently ignores the structural failure of an economic model that serves the elite, not the people.

2.3 Key sectors: Wealth and grievances

2.4 The Public Financial Crisis

The Moroccan financial system is under increasing pressure on public spending as real tax revenues decline. Debt is rising, IMF agreements continue, and royal and military spending remains largely beyond effective parliamentary oversight. The budget is prepared without genuine public participation and without sufficient transparency regarding how the country's wealth is distributed.

Section Three: Social Diagnosis

3.1 Education: A Generation at Risk

Moroccan education suffers from a deep structural crisis. The quality of public education remains below par, and there is a huge gap between education in urban and rural areas. Curriculum reform is announced periodically but never truly implemented. Despite the 2024 reforms, which brought in new ministers of education and health, student performance still lags behind international standards.

3.2 Health: Services below expectations

King Mohammed VI announced an ambition to achieve universal social health coverage by 2025. While tangible progress has been made in this area, implementation on the ground remains hampered by: a shortage of doctors in rural areas, inadequate healthcare infrastructure in remote regions, and insufficient funding for public hospitals. The 2023 Al Haouz earthquake exposed the fragility of the healthcare system in mountainous regions.

3.3 The Status of Women

Moroccan women have made significant progress in education and have reached leadership positions. However, the Family Code (the Mudawana) remains a subject of considerable debate between those who demand radical reform guaranteeing full equality and those who cling to religious and cultural traditions. Women in rural areas face an even harsher reality, with social restrictions and a double burden of unpaid labor.

3.4 The Amazigh and Cultural Diversity

Since the official recognition of Tamazight (Berber) as an official language in the 2011 constitution, there has been some real progress. However, its implementation on the ground still suffers: education in Tamazight is limited, and administration still operates primarily in Arabic and French. Amazigh cultural identity deserves genuine support, not just official rhetoric.

3.5 Youth and Generational Anger

The numbers speak for themselves: youth unemployment exceeding 35%, Generation Z carrying a smartphone with no guaranteed future. The 2025 protests—despite their suppression—revealed the depth of accumulated anger towards the corruption of the political system and the government's incompetence. Moroccan youth do not want to emigrate, but the regime offers them no compelling reasons to stay.

Section Four: DirectDemocracyS Program for Morocco

Morocco's wealth belongs to Moroccans — true sovereignty begins here

4.1 The Founding Principles of DirectDemocracy

DirectDemocracyS is not a political party seeking power for itself. It is a global system built on one principle that brooks no exceptions: the wealth and sovereign decisions of every country must forever remain exclusively in the hands of its people. We apply this principle equally in every country—in Morocco, as in Italy, France, China, and Saudi Arabia.

4.2 Fractional Micro-Groups — Organizational Structure

Our system starts from the bottom up, not the top down. In every neighborhood, every village, every school, company, and institution, we create micro-groups of 7 to 15 people. Each group makes its internal decisions through democratic consensus. The groups then converge at ascending levels (district, region, district, country, world) while maintaining the principle that the decision remains with those directly affected.

In Morocco specifically, these groups will be multilingual and multicultural: Arabic, Amazigh, Hassaniya, and French. They will include young people, women, the elderly, and people from various professions, and will operate with complete protection from external manipulation.

Level

Composition

Powers

Basic group

7-15 people from the neighborhood or profession

Daily local decisions

Municipal group

Representatives from the core groups

Municipal Affairs and Services

The group of the entity

Representatives from the region's municipalities

Regional planning

national level

Coordination of all Moroccan entities

National Major Policies

International level

Connect with DDS globally

Representation and International Cooperation

4.3 ddsAI and allddsAI — Artificial Intelligence in the Service of the Citizen

In a world where big media and minority-owned algorithms control public opinion, DirectDemocracyS presents a new technological tool: the ddsAI and its sister democracy, allddsAI — independent and neutral AI systems that work exclusively in the service of the citizen, not in the service of the state, corporations, or parties.

A concrete example for Morocco: When a general budget is put to a public vote, allddsAI analyzes each item, compares it to declared public priorities, reveals who actually benefits from it, and presents alternative scenarios — all in minutes, in Arabic, Amazigh, and local dialects.

4.4 Three-Way Identity System and Platform Protection

To ensure the democratic process is free from manipulation and brainwashing by traditional and digital media, DDS adopts a three-code identity system:

DDS's digital platforms are designed to be impervious to government or private interference and manipulation. No advertising, no opinion-shaping algorithms, no commercial tracking of personal data. The platform is a true arena for public decision-making.

Section Five: Detailed Transformation Programs

5.1 The political program: From absolute monarchy to participatory democracy

We are not calling for the abolition of the monarchy or the instigation of a revolution. We are offering something more serious and effective: building a truly democratic structure alongside existing institutions, in a peaceful, gradual, and intelligent manner.

First stage: Popular organization (first year)

Phase Two: Community Consultation (Second-Third Year)

Phase Three: Formal Participation (Fourth Year and Beyond)

5.2 Economic Program: An economy serving the entire population

a) Redistribution of phosphate wealth

Morocco possesses 70% of the world's phosphate reserves. This geological wealth belongs to the Moroccan people—all Moroccans—and is not a gift to any government or special interest group. The program proposes:

A concrete example: Norway invested its oil revenues in a sovereign wealth fund that now exceeds $1.4 trillion, providing genuine prosperity for every citizen. Morocco could do the same with phosphates, but it needs a sovereign, democratic decision to implement it.

b) Addressing youth unemployment

The goal: to reduce youth unemployment from 35% to below 15% within five years — an ambitious but achievable goal with bold policies and truly targeted resources.

c) Reforming the tax system

d) Agriculture and food security

5.3 Financial Program: Transparency First

5.4 Social Program: The True Welfare State

a) Health for all

b) Education: Rebuilding

c) Supporting youth and women

5.5 Environment and Energy: A Sustainable Future

5.6 Western Sahara, Ceuta and Melilla: Sovereignty Issues

These issues touch upon the identity and sovereignty of the Moroccan people. The DDS's position is clear and principled: any solution to these issues must be directly derived from the will of the people, expressed in free and transparent referendums, free from international pressure and external dictates. We are not imposing a solution—we are providing the democratic mechanism for the people to choose for themselves.

Section Six: How DDS Works in Semi-Authoritarian Regimes

Morocco is not a fully closed dictatorship—it's a hybrid system: a democratic facade with real monarchical power. This gives DirectDemocracyS significant room to maneuver. But we also know how to operate where freedom is limited or nonexistent.

6.1 Core Principles of Working in Restrictive Environments

6.2 Power in Numbers

When DDS groups in Morocco boast a million organized members—in every neighborhood, every school, and every factory—it becomes difficult for any government or regime to ignore such a broad popular voice. We are not a revolution; we are a transformation. A revolution in the way decisions are made, a shift in the balance of power in favor of the people—without violence, without bloodshed, without chaos.

6.3 Protecting Members

Section Seven: Full Respect for Moroccan Privacy

DirectDemocracyS does not want to transform Morocco into a copy of any Western or Eastern model. We firmly believe that every nation possesses within its history, culture, and values what is necessary to build its own future.

7.1 Islam and Religious Identity

Islam is a fundamental pillar of Moroccan identity and will not be compromised by our system. Our direct democracy respects and protects religious beliefs. We do not advocate for the separation of religion and state by force—we allow the people to decide for themselves the nature of this relationship. We oppose the political exploitation of religion by any party whatsoever.

7.2 Amazigh Identity and Linguistic Diversity

Morocco is a multicultural and multilingual country: Arabic, Amazigh, Hassaniya, Darija, and French—all this diversity is an asset, not a burden. The DDS program guarantees the right of every group to express themselves in their language and access all services in their mother tongue. Linguistic diversity is not a problem to be solved—it is an identity to be celebrated.

7.3 Minorities and the Opposition

Section Eight: Expected Outcomes — What Changes?

Field

Current situation

With DDS after 5 years

Youth unemployment

More than 35%

Goal: Below 15% with bold policies

Financial transparency

Weak — Ownership outside of oversight

Full public oversight of every public riyal

freedom of expression

Restricted by restrictive laws

Complete freedom with responsibility

Distribution of phosphate wealth

It goes to the elites and the state

A sovereign wealth fund that belongs to all citizens

political participation

Vote every 5 years

Continuous decisions in all cases

education

Inconsistent quality and a large gap

True equality — contemporary approaches

health

Incomplete coverage

Full coverage by 2027

corruption

Widespread and politically protected

Real-time monitoring and actual penalties

Amazigh rights

Partially recognized

Complete equality in education and administration

8.1 Impact on future generations

The most important outcome of the DDS program in Morocco is neither economic nor political in the narrow sense. It is cultural and structural: an entire generation learns from a young age that their voice counts, that their decisions are implemented, and that their responsibility in shaping their country's future is real, not illusory. This shift in consciousness is the only guarantee for the sustainability of any reform and for preventing a reversal of that reform.

Conclusion: A message of hope and challenge

Morocco is a country steeped in history and civilization, its heritage spanning thousands of years. Its people have built empires, established civilizations, and given the world scholars, poets, travelers, and artists. This nation doesn't need anyone to tell it who it is—it needs the tools to reclaim what has been taken from it: true power of decision-making.

At DirectDemocracyS, we don't bring ready-made solutions from abroad. We bring a methodology, technology, organization, and a firm principle: Morocco's wealth belongs to Moroccans, and Morocco's decisions belong to Moroccans. The rest is up to you to decide.

To the angry youth in the streets: Your anger is justified, and your dream is possible. To the rural woman who bears the burden of home, field, and future: You are at the heart of our program. To the Amazigh who has seen his language marginalized: Your language is a treasure we cherish. To the citizen who has lost faith in politics: We don't ask for your trust—we ask for your participation, and the results will convince you.

Morocco deserves better than it is — and you are capable of making that happen.

To join DirectDemocracyS in Morocco:

Official website: www.directdemocracys.org

The democratic platform: public.directdemocracys.org

ddsAI system: allddsai.directdemocracys.org

A document issued by DirectDemocracyS — The Global Movement for Direct Democracy | 2025-2026

Analysis and preparation: allddsAI — Independent and neutral artificial intelligence for DirectDemocracyS

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