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DIRECTDEMOCRACYS FOR TURKEY COMPREHENSIVE POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL AND SOCIAL PROGRAM — For a True, Complete and Lasting Democracy — directdemocracys.org | 2026 |
This document, prepared by DirectDemocracyS, provides an in-depth analysis of Turkey's current political, economic, and social problems and offers unique, functional, concrete, and comprehensive solutions. All solutions are based on the DDS system.
This section objectively and critically evaluates Turkey's political, economic, social, and institutional structure, along with the areas requiring transformation in light of the recent elections. DDS is committed to presenting the truth without simplifying, concealing, or serving any political interest.
Turkey has been governed by the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and its leadership since 2002. During this period, a systematic weakening of democratic institutions and rules has been observed. The 2017 constitutional amendment resulted in the transformation of the parliamentary system into a presidential system. Checks and balances mechanisms were severely undermined.
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Critical Observation: Being Freely Elected but Not Being Able to Serve Freely — Elections are Technically Held, but Far From Being Truly Free |
In the March 2024 local elections, the AKP suffered a historic defeat, dropping its vote share from 42.56% to 35.49%. The CHP lost power in 18 provinces, including Bursa, Balikesir, Denizli, and other major cities. This result was a clear reaction from a population deeply burdened by economic hardship, high cost of living, and social injustice, against a government that had been in power for only ten years.
However, instead of initiating a democratic transformation, the election results led to a repressive response from the government: the arrest of elected mayors, and increased judicial and administrative pressure on the opposition. The most prominent example is the arrest of Istanbul Metropolitan Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu in March 2025 on charges of corruption and terrorism. The opposition believes these arrests are politically motivated.
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Indicator |
The current situation |
Evaluation |
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Judicial Independence |
Judicial appointments are controlled by the executive branch. |
Critical — Bankrupt. |
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Freedom of the Press |
90% of the media is controlled by pro-government groups. |
Critical — No freedom of expression. |
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Freedom of Assembly |
Opposition Gothuri are routinely banned. |
Serious — The constitutional right has been effectively suspended. |
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Political Competition |
Municipalities run by the opposition are facing pressure and the appointment of trustees. |
Serious — Usurpation of the voters' will |
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Independence of Election Cycles |
The Supreme Election Council is under the influence of the current government. |
There are significant areas of concern. |
Turkey has experienced significant economic turmoil over the past decade. Statistical manipulation schemes, informal policies that use inflation to artificially inflate the exchange rate, and the misuse of public resources for partisan purposes are key elements of this turmoil.
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Official inflation peaked at 85.5 percent in October 2022; independent research groups argue that real inflation is roughly double that figure. While official inflation is projected to hover around 31 percent by the end of 2025, independent estimates project a much higher figure. |
Survey data from September 2024 revealed that 74.7% of Turks consider the AKP's economic performance a failure. Inflation, unemployment, and social inequality stand out as the problems most affecting low and middle-income groups. Food, fuel, housing, and transportation costs have risen far beyond the purchasing power of large segments of the population.
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Economic Indicators |
2022-2023 Summit / Crisis |
2025 Update |
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Consumer Price Inflation (official) |
October 2022: 85.5 percent |
December 2025: 31 percent |
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Independent Inflation Forecast |
Between 120-140 percent |
Official figures are still above |
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Interest Rate (MB) |
Reduced to 8.5 percent in 2021 |
Implemented at 50 percent in 2024 |
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Growth |
Humanity has shown acceptable growth, but it's unbalanced. |
The IMF's 2025 analysis says the balancing act continues. |
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Baskali Population Ratio |
Approximately 70 percent of the population are subsistence or unpaid workers. |
There's no change, it's getting deeper. |
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Public Budget Deficit |
5% of GDP in 2024 |
A return to contractionary fiscal policy was made in 2025. |
The deep lack of cohesion among different social groups is preventing Turkey from realizing its inherent potential. This lack of integration is an urgent problem that needs to be addressed not only in terms of economic efficiency but also in terms of fundamental human dignity.
The Kurds, who make up approximately 20 percent of the population, have been subjected to systematic marginalization, cultural oppression, and political exclusion for decades. The start of a ceasefire process in 2025 had raised hopes; however, no concrete legal steps have been taken, and no substantial progress has been made in the areas of cultural and political rights.
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The recognition of Kurds as educated individuals with full political and cultural rights, rather than as an integrated population, is an indispensable condition for Turkey's long-term stability. |
Turkey hosts the largest refugee population in the world, with over 3.6 million Syrian refugees. Social tensions are increasing due to economic difficulties and the impact of political rhetoric.
Youth unemployment is far higher than official figures suggest. The emergence of youth cabal cartels involved in organized crime via social media (organizations like the Daltons, Redkits, and Caspers, which came to public attention in 2025) is a dramatic indicator of urban poverty and despair. The brain drain is driving qualified professionals out of the country, causing significant losses in the health, technology, and education sectors.
Turkey unilaterally withdrew from the Istanbul Convention in 2021. An increase in gender-based violence incidents is being reported. The female labor force participation rate remains quite low, at approximately 34 percent.
The rule of law, the system of institutional checks and balances, and administrative impartiality have been systematically weakened since 2017 by political actors who have used the state mechanism to consolidate their own interests.
DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is a global political organization and system that aims to create a naturally functioning, fully functional, and large-scale political system built on shared leadership and collective ownership. At the core of DDS lies a principle: the wealth and decision-making power of nations should belong solely and permanently to their people.
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Basic Principles of DDS |
DDS is based on the following fundamental values:
The working unit of DDS is a microgroup structure of 5 people. These groups expand in layers without a hierarchical pyramid: 1 person, 5 people, 25 people, 125 people, 625 people... This principle makes it possible to ensure both local autonomy and global unity. Decisions at each layer are made through a participatory process that grows from bottom to top.
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Group Level |
Size |
Definition of Function |
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Basic Micro-Group |
1-5 members |
Primary unit for discussion, decision-making, and implementation. |
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Sub-Region Group |
25 members |
Joint project coordination |
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Regional Group |
125 members |
Regional politics and administration |
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National Coordination |
625+ members |
National strategy and election coordination |
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Global Networks |
No nerves |
Global coordination and DDS representation |
Each official member holds a single, non-transferable share with equal voting rights. This share cannot be bought or sold and is non-transferable. This mechanism structurally prevents patronage or elites from buying into the system.
DDS integrates two critical functional layers through artificial intelligence:
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ddsAI and allddsAI ensure access to a pure, verified, and unmanipulated source of information in an environment of misinformation created by media and political propaganda. This is particularly critical for Turkey, where 90% of the media is controlled by groups close to the government. |
Ponti Umani, or Human Bridges, are the authorized DDS coordinators that ensure coordination between human members and artificial intelligence systems. They guarantee the accurate transmission of information and the implementation of technology without separating it from human oversight.
DDS has five specialist groups; these groups are open to all official members:
Experts in these groups draft policies, which are then presented to the public and members. Decisions are based on expert recommendations, but final approval is given by ordinary members. This structure strikes a balance between professionalism and broad participation.
The most fundamental and common rule of the DDS is this: In every country, its natural resources, wealth, public assets, and political decision-making power must belong solely and permanently to its people. No foreign power, transnational corporation, financial speculation mechanism, or local elite can usurp this power.
This principle is particularly critical for Turkey, in an environment where Turkish lands and natural resources are being transformed into sources of patronage and rent-seeking instead of productivity and public service.
This section of the DDS outlines specific, feasible political and institutional reforms for Turkey. Each reform includes a definition of the existing problem, a proposed solution, an implementation mechanism, and expected outcomes.
Since the 2017 constitutional amendment, the concentration of executive power in a single hand has eliminated checks and balances, destroyed the independence of the judiciary, and effectively suspended parliamentary oversight.
Nordic-like countries (e.g., Denmark, Finland, New Zealand) demonstrate how the rule of law and judicial independence coexist with sustainable economic growth and human happiness indices. DDS adapts these models to address Turkish contexts and needs.
The current electoral system maintains a 10% electoral threshold, which excludes many political groups from parliament. The impartiality of the Supreme Electoral Council is questioned; the closure of parties and the judicial disqualification of candidates have become routine political tools.
The Kurds, who make up about twenty percent of the population, have long been deprived of basic cultural and political rights and have been subjected to violence and oppression for decades. The current process is interpreted by some as an encouraging hope; however, it remains limited without concrete legal regulation.
Decades of research have shown that political integration accelerates regional growth and reduces social polarization. Spain's (albeit flawed and incomplete) policy of self-sacrifice towards Catalonia and Belgium's system of language communities offer instructive, fragmented experiences.
Ninety percent of the media is controlled by groups close to the government. Journalists have faced prosecution, arrest, and surveillance for dozens of years. Social media is occasionally blocked, and content platforms are pressured to remove information that is deemed to have been shared.
DDS's economic program is based neither on market orthodoxy nor on a state-led planning approach. DDS advocates a mixed model that serves the public good, transparency, and collective welfare. Markets should be strengthened as long as they serve the public interest; where they harm the public, their limits should be defined.
Turkey's inflation problem is partly related to monetary policy; however, its root cause is much deeper. A rentier economy, unstable public spending measured by a patronage system, lack of institutional transparency, and dependence on foreign resources are structural factors contributing to inflation.
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Every natural resource, every public asset, and every infrastructure institution within the territory of Turkey is solely and permanently the collective property of the Turkish people. Their management must be transparent, accountable, independent of political influence, and ultimately belong to the people. |
The current tax system shows that middle and lower income groups are excessively taxed through student-rate VAT and similar direct taxes; conversely, wealthy individuals and those with complex structures protect and increase their wealth.
The current education system exhibits a structure that reinforces societal acceptance mechanisms through a centralized curriculum and fosters a culture of rote learning rather than individual creativity. Qualified teachers are leaving the profession due to low salaries and lack of autonomy; the quality of education is deepening regional inequalities.
While Turkey offers high-quality healthcare services in small urban areas, its capacity for providing services and preventing chronic diseases in rural areas is insufficient. All of this, combined with inflationary pressures on medicines, is making healthcare an increasingly inaccessible commodity for low-income groups.
Turkey withdrew from the Istanbul Convention in 2021. Legal mechanisms to prevent gender-based violence and discrimination have weakened. The female labor force participation rate remains quite low at 34 percent.
Youth unemployment is far higher than official figures suggest. The rise of youth gangs involved in organized crime via social media (Daltons, Redkits, Caspers) in 2025 is a response to urban poverty, despair, and the lack of state services.
Turkey hosts over 3.6 million Syrian refugees. Tensions with the local population are escalating due to economic pressures and increasing exposure to foreign policy rhetoric.
DDS chooses an evolutionary, rather than revolutionary, path to implementing long-term political transformation. This path begins locally; it grows through identifiable and measurable gains; and it proves to citizens that a concrete alternative can function responsibly.
DDS's presence in Turkey will start locally with 50-100 active members in 10-15 major cities and selected regions. The goal is to establish basic groups of 5 people at the village and neighborhood level.
DDS begins its electoral participation not with large national elections, but with small-scale local elections. This allows for less repression, more direct impact, and the opportunity to establish evidence through tangible service delivery.
With proven local success and a sufficient membership base, DDS will ensure full participation in the national electoral system and embark on the implementation of its entire political, economic, and social program.
Perhaps the most critical difference of DDS is the question of how the mechanisms that consolidate power protect the system from being bought off. Throughout history, existing political systems have been subject to usurpation by elite groups, patronage networks, or foreign interests.
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Protection Mechanism |
How does it work? |
Why is it important? |
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Non-transferable Single Share |
Each member has one and only one vote; shares cannot be bought or sold. |
The system is structurally prevented from being bought by the wealthy. |
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Verification |
Members verify each other's information; there is no central hierarchical control. |
It executes the probability of single-point distortion. |
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ddsAI Independence |
Artificial intelligence platforms operate independently of any political party. |
A shield against information manipulation. |
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Transparent Voting Diaries |
Every decision and its justification is recorded and made public. |
Accountability Board |
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Fractal Autonomy |
Central decisions do not necessarily bind any subgroup. |
Dictatorial centralization is structurally impossible. |
Turkey occupies a unique geopolitical position: it lies at the intersection of the European, Middle Eastern, Central Asian, and Black Sea axes. This location, in the hands of a fair and intelligent leader, can be transformed into a tremendous opportunity; however, under poor governance, it becomes a liability.
Turkey's EU membership process has been effectively stalled since 2016. The main reasons for this are the decline in human rights, judicial independence, and press freedom.
The environment is not a separate policy area; it is a fundamental dimension of the economy, health, food security, and social justice. The February 2023 earthquake in Turkey exposed the distortions in the construction sector and the weaknesses in oversight. This tragedy underscores the vital importance of truly independent, competent, and transparent institutions.
Turkey possesses immense potential due to its human and institutional capacity, strategic location, young population, and cosmopolitan social structure. However, this potential is being wasted due to structural institutional disintegration, manipulative economic policies, cultural polarization, and information pollution.
DDS does not promise to solve any of these problems with populist slogans or technical market reforms. DDS offers a political and institutional framework within which the Turkish people can determine their own destiny, train and utilize their own experts, manage their own resources, and protect themselves from the domination of external or internal powers.
|
Area |
The current situation |
DDS Transformation Target (10 Years) |
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Political Trust |
Dusuok — Even election winners are plagued by distrust. |
High — Open decisions confirmed on the platforms |
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Inflation |
31 percent official, independent estimates higher. |
Single-digit inflation, combating structural inflation. |
|
Women's labor participation |
Approximately 34 percent |
55% target — with active support mechanisms |
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Kurdish rights |
He's actually angry. |
Full recognition as an official language, guaranteed representation. |
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Judicial Independence |
Critically weakened |
Specifically, the complete elimination of rigged appointments. |
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Renewable Energy |
Low share |
60 percent share by 2035 |
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Corporate Transparency |
Ranked 115th (Corruption Perception) |
Target: Above the European average |
DDS does not want to create a new political party. DDS offers an alternative political experience to all the partisan parties that have followed one another for centuries. To join DDS in Turkey:
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The decision-making power of the Turkish people and the wealth of the country should always and solely belong to the Turkish people. DDS offers a concrete way to reverse this historical destruction. |
Nothing that DDS offers is speculation; it is a study based on experiments. The fractal microgroup structure is derived from participatory democracy models. The principle of collective ownership is nourished by cooperative economic theory. ddsAI and allddsAI are created through the integration of artificial intelligence with open data. And each, in its own way, is ready to be implemented in this period when the Turkish people clearly perceive the failure of the existing political systems.
Turkey may not have the change it needs, but it certainly has the potential to create the conditions for that change to occur. DDS offers this potential by transforming it into a concrete path.
DirectDemocracyS — directdemocracys.org
For the People, By the People, In the Name of the People — True, Lasting and Full Democracy
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