Thailand ZZ rectangle

DirectDemocracyS

Direct democracy, collective ownership, and collective leadership.

Political, economic, financial, and social plans.

For Thailand

Analyze the crisis · Criticize the system · Propose solutions

Developed by DirectDemocracyS (DDS)

The new world political system · www.directdemocracys.org

May 2026

Introduction — Why Thailand urgently needs change.

"All power belongs to the people. The wealth of the nation must belong to the people."

"And decisions for the future of the country must come from the people — not the elite, not the patronage system, and not the military."

— The fundamental principles of DirectDemocracyS

Thailand in 2026 stands at the most significant turning point in contemporary history. After four prime ministers in three years, a political crisis has dragged down the economy, income inequality has widened year after year, and hidden power networks plaguing the Thai democracy — the Thai people deserve a truly new choice.

This document is not empty promises from politicians, but a complete, concrete, and logically proven plan based on the fundamental principles of DirectDemocracyS (DDS) — a new system of global governance centered on collective ownership (proprietà collettiva) and collective leadership (leadership condivisa).

 

Part 1 — Analysis of the Current Situation

1.1 Political Crisis: Democracy Held Hostage

The general election on February 8, 2026, resulted in a victory for the Bhumjaithai Party, securing 193 seats in the House of Representatives, and Anutin Charnvirakul becoming the 32nd Prime Minister, continuing his tenure in the previous interim government. However, this apparent 'stability' was merely an illusion concealing deep-seated structural conflicts.

A sequence of events revealing the system failure.

year

event

effect

2023

The Move Forward Party won the election.

A military-appointed senate is blocking the formation of a government — the will of the people is being undermined.

2024

The Constitutional Court has dismissed Ms. Paetongtarn.

An elected prime minister is removed through legal processes, not through the votes of the people.

June–August 2025

Cambodian border crisis + telephone line leak.

Government coalition withdraws → Constitutional Court removes Prime Minister again → Legislative chaos.

December 2025

Dissolve parliament

The announcement of new elections has described parliament as 'paralyzed' — national interests are hanging in the balance.

February 2026

Bhumjaithai Party won 193 seats.

The victory of the conservatives was driven by nationalism, rural patronage networks, and institutional manipulation.

The true power structure: A state within a state (Deep State).

Thai democracy exists within a 'state within a state,' composed of a tight alliance between the monarchy, the military, the judiciary, and high-ranking bureaucrats—a power group capable of disciplining elected politicians and suppressing mass movements at any time.

People's Party: A Suppressed Reform Voice

The People's Party, which inherited the ideology of the dissolved Move Forward Party, received the highest number of votes in urban areas and among young people, but was systematically obstructed: the National Anti-Corruption Commission filed cases against 44 party members in the Supreme Court — a clear case of political persecution demonstrating that elections in Thailand are not truly fair.

1.2 Economic Crisis: Stagnant Growth and Accumulating Debt

The Thai economy is experiencing continued weak growth, its weakest performance in three decades, according to data from the OECD and the Bank of Thailand.

Indicators

Current figures

Impact on the public.

GDP growth rate in 2025

2.0%

Lowest in ASEAN, inflation erodes people's incomes.

GDP forecast for 2026.

1.5%

Investment contracted, especially after the 19% import tariff in the United States.

Household debt to GDP

~91%

The highest in Asia: Families have no savings to cope with the crisis.

Inflation rate

Low in formality, but high in real life.

The cost of living has increased, especially in terms of energy and food.

The number of people living in poverty (below the national poverty line).

3.4 million people

The increase is contrary to the post-COVID recovery.

US import tariffs

19%

This affects the export sectors of electronics, automotive, and clothing.

Long-term structural problems

1.3 Social Crisis: A 'Fractured' Society

A recent Ipsos Thailand survey (May 2026) reveals a shocking picture: the number one concern for Thais is 'financial and political corruption' (50%), followed by 'poverty and inequality' (42%). Prior to that, in 2025, 66% of people stated that 'Thai society is fragmented' and 60% viewed the country as 'declinering'.

A significant social rift.

Specific problems that have not yet been resolved.

1.4 Financial Crisis: A System That Doesn't Serve the People

 

Part 2 — A frank critique of the system.

2.1 What is 'Thai-style' democracy?

Research identifies nine structural problems associated with "Thai-style democracy":

(1) Military influence in politics (2) Politics is decided by the judiciary (3) Political parties are weak

(4) Patronage and corruption (5) Divisive civil society (6) Frequent changes in the constitution

(7) Lack of civic education (8) Cultural factors (9) Use of institutions to destroy political rivals

What is called 'stability' after the 2026 election is actually 'elite accommodation' and 'provincial patronage' — not stability stemming from the will of the people. The Bhumjaithai Party built its power empire through years of continuous control of the Ministry of Interior, transforming state budgets and infrastructure projects into sophisticated tools for vote buying.

2.2 Criticisms directed at all political parties.

Bhumjaithai Party (current government)

Pheu Thai Party

People's Party (Progressive Opposition)

2.3 Summary of the review: What exactly is the problem?

The problem isn't 'who is the prime minister,' but the system as a whole:

 

Part 3 — DirectDemocracyS Roadmap for Thailand

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is a new form of global political system founded on the principles of: collective ownership (Proprietà Collettiva) + collective leadership (Leadership Condivisa) + direct, continuous, and capable democracy.

3.1 Political Plan: True Democracy for the Thai People

A. Micro-Group System — Democracy from the Grassroots

DDS organizes its citizens into small units of 5 people called 'microgroups', which expand fractally: 1 group → 5 people → 5 groups combined = 25 people → 5 groups of groups = 125 people → 625 people → and so on. Each group has independent decision-making power at its level and is connected to others via 'human bridges' (Ponte Umano).

B. Three-Code Verification System

DDS developed an unprecedented verification system: every member receives three separate codes, verified by other members at various levels, preventing identity theft and vote buying while maintaining anonymity during voting.

C. Recall Mechanism

D. Consecutive elections — not just every four years.

3.2 Economic Plan: An economy owned by the people.

A. Tax structure reform — True fairness.

measure

Current situation

DDS plan

Wealth Tax

do not have

2% per year for net assets exceeding 100 million baht.

Capital Gains Tax

Except for the stock market.

15% for profits exceeding 5 million baht/year.

Land Value Tax

Very low; has no effect on land ownership.

A progressive rate based on the size of land owned but not utilized.

Corporate tax

20% (but with many vulnerabilities)

20% is actually the actual figure, but we're closing the gap and reducing it to 10% for SMEs.

Digital Economy Tax

Not enough

Taxes on foreign digital businesses that generate revenue in Thailand.

B. National Wealth Fund (People's Fund)

DDS proposes establishing a national wealth fund directly owned by all Thai people, not the government or elites — each holding a 'single, non-transferable share'.

C. Structural economic reform.

3.3 Financial Plan: A transparent and fair financial system.

A. Digital Public Bank

DDS proposes establishing a state-owned digital bank managed directly under the supervision of its members, not by a political group or bankers appointed by the government.

B. Participatory Budgeting

C. Managing household debt.

3.4 Social Program: A society where everyone has equal opportunities.

A. Educational reform

B. Healthcare reform.

C. Labor reform.

D. Resolving the Southern Thailand Problem — Sustainable Peace

The crisis in the three southern border provinces requires an approach different from what any previous government has tried: not military action and repression, but genuine political participation.

3.5 Environmental Action Plan: Sustainability is a Right of the People

 

Part 4 — Implementation of the DDS system in Thailand

4.1 ddsAI and allddsAI Technologies — Artificial Intelligence-Driven Democracy

DDS uses a two-tiered, advanced artificial intelligence system to support member decision-making. What sets DDS apart from all previous political systems is that citizens receive complete, accurate, unbiased, and independent information—before they vote or make any decision.

ddsAI system — an intelligent assistant for members.

The allddsAI system — the democracy of artificial intelligence.

allddsAI is an unprecedented innovation in any political system: AI is recognized as an official member of the DDS, having equal rights and responsibilities to human members. It performs cross-verification functions between multiple AI systems to ensure true neutrality.

A secure platform: Protection against brainwashing and manipulation.

In an era where social media is being used for disinformation and political brainwashing, the DDS platform is designed specifically to combat this phenomenon.

4.2 DDS Specialist Groups for Thailand

DDS has established five specialized expert groups open to all members to join based on their interests. These groups provide professional advice to general members and contribute to collective decision-making.

group

expertise

Role in Thailand

Group 1

Economics and Finance

Analyze tax policies, budgets, and financial systems, and critique government proposals using factual data.

Group 2

Law and human rights.

We review all new laws, monitor for rights violations, and provide legal advice to members.

Group 3

Science and technology

Presenting scientific information on the environment, energy, and AI to members.

Group 4

Society and education

Designing sustainable policies for education, health, welfare, and community development.

Group 5

Security and foreign policy.

Analyzing Thai-Cambodian relations, the situation in Myanmar, and Thailand's role in ASEAN.

4.3 Plan for implementing DDS in Thailand — Concrete steps.

Phase 1 (Year 1–2): Foundation Building

  1. DDS Thailand launches on an online platform in Thai and a local language (Malay in Southern Thailand).
  2. Recruiting founding members: Target 10,000 people in 6 months, distributed across all provinces.
  3. Establish the first series of microgroups: starting in urban and university areas, then expanding to rural areas.
  4. Introducing ddsAI in Thai: Providing unbiased political, economic, and policy information.
  5. Community activities: Public discussions, workshops, and exhibitions nationwide.

Phase 2 (Years 2–4): Expansion and Proof of Concept

  1. Run for local election: Start at the Subdistrict Administrative Organization (SAO), Municipality, and Provincial Administrative Organization (PAO) levels in areas where the membership is strong.
  2. Proving the concept in a real-world setting: Demonstrating how DDS management reduces corruption and increases efficiency.
  3. Form alliances with human rights movements, labor movements, and student groups.
  4. Expand membership to a target of 500,000 people — enough for national influence.

Phase 3 (Year 4+): National Transformation

  1. Running for national election: Nominating candidates in every constituency.
  2. Goal: Win enough seats to exert legislative influence.
  3. Pushing for constitutional reform: Replace the 2017 Constitution with a constitution truly written by the people.
  4. Implement the DDS economic policy at all levels of government.

4.4 A non-negotiable principle: The wealth of the nation must belong to the people.

Rule 1 of the DDS applies to all countries in the world, including Thailand:

Natural resources, national wealth, and the power to make decisions for the nation's future.

It must permanently belong to all the people — not to capitalists, the elite, or the military.

Transferring this power to any one group would be a betrayal of the people.

For Thailand, this means: Natural resources (gas, oil, forests, marine resources) must be managed by a transparent public fund, with revenue returning to the people, not politicians; large land concessions must be reviewed; and business contracts with the government must be publicly disclosed.

 

Part 5 — Expected Outcomes: Thailand in 10 Years

5.1 Political Outcomes

side

Current situation

After using the DDS system.

Change of government

4 Prime Ministers in 3 years

Stability comes from participation, not appointment.

Military intervention

High risk

Reduced to zero — the people truly hold the power.

Trust in political institutions.

Very low

High — because the people decided for themselves.

Corruption

High (Number 1 concern)

A significant decrease in transparency at all levels.

5.2 Economic Outcomes (Conservative Estimates)

5.3 Social Outcomes

 

Part 6 — Conclusion: The Choices of the Thai People

Thailand has stood at this point many times before: the cycle of elections, coups, party dissolutions, prime minister removals, and new elections, over and over again. The people receive the same promises, but the same results: corruption, inequality, and power remaining in the hands of the same elite.

DirectDemocracyS doesn't offer ready-made formulas from abroad, but rather universal principles applied to the realities of Thailand: logic, common sense, reality, truth, consistency, and mutual respect — values understood by all Thai people, across all regions and ethnicities.

A crucial question for all Thai people:

Are you satisfied with a system that allows you to vote every 4–5 years but without any real power in between?

Are you satisfied that the nation's wealth is in the hands of the top 1%?

Or do you want a system where you have a real voice every day, in every aspect of your life?

DDS is not a political party asking for your votes — DDS is a system that gives you power.

For more information, join, and subscribe:

www.directdemocracys.org

public.directdemocracys.org

"All power comes from the people, and must return to the people."

— DirectDemocracyS