By Luxembourg on Saturday, 06 June 2026
Category: English

Program for Luxembourg

DirectDemocracyS

World Organization for Direct Democracy

LUXEMBOURG

Political, Economic, Financial and Social Program

A fundamental analysis of the current situation,

with concrete solutions and an authentic democratic program

Luxembourg 2025-2030

DirectDemocracyS Global — ddsAI & allddsAI technologies

1. FOREWORD: Why Luxembourg needs a real democracy

Luxembourg is considered one of the richest countries in the world. Its GDP per capita is the highest in Europe. But what does wealth mean if the majority of citizens have no real say in the decisions of their country? What does democracy mean if elections every five years are the only act of political participation?

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) makes a clear diagnosis: Luxembourg has a democratic deficit. Not because the state is not functioning — on the contrary, many institutions are functioning well. But because power, wealth and decisions are systematically controlled by a small elite that represents the interests of finance capital, real estate speculation and multinational corporations — not those of the Luxembourgish people.

This program is not a utopian dream. It is a precise, realistic and coherent response to the concrete problems of Luxembourg. It is based on logic, common sense, the study of reality, and consistent respect for a single fundamental rule: the rights and decisions of power of a country must remain forever and exclusively with the people.

2. ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION

2.1 The political system after October 2023

On October 8, 2023, Luxembourg voters held parliamentary elections. The CSV (Christian Social People's Party) under Luc Frieden emerged as the largest party with 29.2% and 21 seats. The Bettel II government (DP-LSAP-Greens) lost its majority, mainly due to the strong decline of the Greens.

Party

Result 2023

CSV (Luc Frieden)

21 seats / 29.2%

DP (Xavier Bettel)

14 seats / 18.7%

LSAP

11 seats / 17.9%

Green (the Greens)

4 seats / 8.9%

ADR

5 seats / 9.3%

Pirate

3 seats / 6.4%

the left

2 seats / 5.0%

Total

60 seats in total

On November 17, 2023, the Frieden-Bettel government was formed: a CSV-DP coalition with 35 seats (majority). Luc Frieden became Prime Minister, Xavier Bettel Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs. After ten years of opposition, the CSV is back in power.

CRITICISM: The new government represents a technocratic coalition between the conservative center (CSV) and the liberals (DP). Both parties are historically closely linked to financial interests, the large real estate market and powerful lobbies. The country's structural problems — housing crisis, social inequalities, democratic deficit — remain without fundamental reform.

2.2 The housing crisis: A national emergency

The housing crisis is undoubtedly Luxembourg's most pressing social problem. Luxembourg has one of the highest housing prices in the world relative to average income. The situation is structural and chronic:

CONCRETE EXAMPLE: A young employee with a gross salary of EUR 3,500 needs on average 40-50 years of work to buy an apartment in Luxembourg City. In Brussels or Berlin it would be 10-15 years. This is not a random result of the market — it is the consequence of a political interest in protecting property owners and speculators.

2.3 The economy: Structural dependence and fragility

Luxembourg is widely known as an international financial center. The financial sector represents around 25-30% of GDP. But this dependence is also a weakness:

Luxembourg's economic structure is increasingly vulnerable: too dependent on the financial sector, too little diversified, with a labor market based on cheap cross-border workers, and a fiscal model that is under pressure in the transition between EU regulation and international tax competition.

2.4 Social Inequalities: The Slow Rise of Two Luxembourgs

Despite its wealth, Luxembourg experiences deep social divisions. The official discourse of the 'Luxembourgish model' hides a reality that is becoming increasingly dramatic:

Indicator

Value

Assessment

Gini coefficient (2023)

0.32 — above EU average

Increasing social division

Poverty risk

18% of the population

Especially single-family homes, retirees

Housing/Income Ratio

Housing = ~40% of income

OECD recommends a maximum of 30%

Cross-border commuter

47% of the labor market in 2024

Systematic social exclusion

Social housing

2% of the stock

Lowest rate in Europe

Digital engagement

<30% in political processes

Democratic deficit

2.5 Democratic Deficit: The Structure of the Problem

The central problem is not just economic or social — it is fundamentally democratic. Luxembourg's political system, like any traditional parliamentary system, structurally produces a democratic deficit:

PRINCIPLE OF DDS: The wealth and political power of Luxembourg — its resources, its land, its financial systems, its public institutions — must remain forever and exclusively with the Luxembourgish people. No private interest, no international financial power, no foreign government may usurp the decision-making power of the Luxembourgish people.

3. THE DDS SYSTEM: The basis of true democracy

3.1 What is DirectDemocracy?

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is a global political organization based on a fundamentally different principle than any traditional party: shared leadership (Leadership Condivisa) and collective ownership (Proprietà Collettiva). Each official member has exactly one non-transferable share of DDS. No one, no elite group, no billionaire can buy more power.

3.2 The fractal micro-group model

DDS organizes its membership in a precise mathematical fractal system:

Plain

Size

Function

Basic group

1 to 5 members

First participation unit

First level

5 groups = 25 members

Neighborhood / Village

Second level

5×25 = 125 members

Municipal area

Third level

5×125 = 625 members

Region / District

National

Linking all levels

Luxembourg National

Globally

International coordination

DDS World Organization

Each group has specialization subgroups: for economy, finance, health, environment, education, security, technology, etc. Each decision is made at the lowest possible level — following the principle of subsidiarity, but with truly direct participation of citizens, not representative elites.

3.3 ddsAI: Technology at the service of democracy

DDS develops and deploys advanced AI technologies (ddsAI) that play a fundamentally different role than commercial AI systems:

3.4 allddsAI: Democracy of AI

allddsAI is a revolutionary innovation: AI systems are recognized as official members of DDS with rights and duties. This comes from a simple observation: modern AI systems are increasingly competent, can process enormous amounts of information, and can assist human decision-making in a neutral way. The integration of AI in the democratic process means: more competence, less corruption, more transparency, and more efficient solutions.

3.5 The three-code system

Each DDS member receives three codes: a personal identification code (PICode), an authentication code (ACode) and a verification code (VCode). Together, these three codes guarantee:

4. POLITICAL PROGRAM: Direct democracy for Luxembourg

4.1 Diagnosis: The failure of the current system

The Frieden-Bettel government (CSV-DP, since November 2023) has introduced a number of political measures that structurally protect the interests of established elites, but do not bring fundamental change for the majority of citizens:

4.2 DDS proposal: Direct democracy in practice

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE: Every citizen of Luxembourg, whether Luxembourger, EU resident or resident, must have the right to express their voice directly, continuously, quickly, safely and competently - not just every 5 years.

4.2.1 Implementation of the DDS micro-group system

Phase 1 — Pilot project (0-12 months): Launch of grassroots micro-groups in the 3 largest municipalities of Luxembourg: Luxembourg City, Esch-sur-Alzette and Differdange. Each group of 5 people will gain access to the ddsAI platform, receive training on democratic participation and begin to discuss local issues and develop concrete proposals.

Phase 2 — National expansion (12-36 months): Expansion to all 102 municipalities of Luxembourg. Formation of specialized subgroups (economy, housing, health, environment) at municipal and regional level. Integration of ddsAI for real-time information and consultation.

Phase 3 — Formal Integration (36-60 months): DDS runs in municipal and parliamentary elections, with a transparent and collectively developed electoral platform that emerged directly from the micro-group consultations.

4.2.2 Democratic referendums and consultations

DDS proposes the introduction of a system of mandatory and binding referendums for all major political decisions. This includes:

These referendums would be held via the DDS platform, with full AI-supported information for each member, guaranteed to be independent of any private interests.

5. ECONOMIC PROGRAM: An equitable welfare model

5.1 The diagnosis: An economy for whom?

Luxembourg produces more wealth per capita than almost any other country in the world. But this wealth is not distributed equitably. The economy benefits most from its growth:

While the working class, young people, individuals with modest means, and retired residents are increasingly under pressure.

5.2 DDS solution: economy at the service of the people

5.2.1 Democratic control of key areas

DDS does not propose total nationalization — that would be extremism that would paralyze the economy. DDS proposes a nuanced model:

Area

DDS measure

Concrete benefits

Financial system

Public Bank of Luxembourg

Loans for housing, SMEs, infrastructure for the flight industry

Energy

100% public control of the energy network

Citizens benefit directly from renewable energy

Floor

Abolition of speculation through lifetime property tax

Only utilitarian property, not speculative property

Digital infrastructure

Public broadband and communications

No monopolies of private companies

bless you

Full public health service

No privatization of basic services

Education

Free and high quality for everyone

Including digital education with ddsAI

5.2.2 Public Bank of Luxembourg

DDS proposes the creation of a public savings bank (based on the existing BCEE/Savings Bank), which:

CONCRETE EXAMPLE: If the public bank grants EUR 500 million in housing loans at 1.5% instead of 4.5%, citizens save around EUR 450 million in interest over 20 years — which stays with Luxembourg families instead of going to private banks.

5.2.3 Diversification of the economy

Overdependence on the financial sector is a systemic risk. DDS proposes a targeted diversification strategy:

5.3 Malpractice and labor law

Luxembourg has one of the most complementary employment models in Europe: a large proportion of workers come from abroad, largely because Luxembourgish students and young people leave the countries because they cannot afford the cost of living. This is not a law of nature — it is a consequence of wrong policies.

Measure

Concrete goal

Expected result

Minimum wage

Increase to 2,500 EUR net/month

Strengthening the purchasing power of low-income households

Working hours

35 hours/week as standard

More quality of life, less burnout

Telework

Right to 3 days/week

Relief of the road network

Cross-border commuter

Integrate democratic consultation

Representing 47% of the labor market

Qualification

National Competence Development Plan

ddsAI for personalized training

Social security

Universal basic income (pilot project)

Protection against digital job loss

6. FINANCIAL PROGRAM: Tax justice and transparent public finances

6.1 The diagnosis: Who pays, who benefits?

Luxembourg is a financial center, but also a country with significant fiscal contradictions. The 2025 state budget shows a deficit of around -0.6% of GDP — the first structural negative balance in years. At the same time:

6.2 DDS tax reforms

6.2.1 Fair taxation of large real estate properties and speculation

DDS PROPOSAL: All freehold properties that are not used as a primary main residence (second homes, rental apartments, investment properties) will be subject to a progressive annual tax: 0.5% of the market price for the first investment property; 2% for the second; 4% for the third and more. This would make speculation very uninteresting and stabilize prices.

Expected result: The introduction of 15,000-20,000 property owners who will bring their rental properties to the market, which will reduce the demand for purchase properties and stabilize or lower rents.

6.2.2 Fair taxation of financial groups

DDS proposes a minimum effective tax rate of 15% on all profits generated in Luxembourg territory — in line with the OECD minimum tax principles that Luxembourg has formally accepted but far too rarely implements. No erosion through 'creative' tax design.

6.2.3 Progressive income tax with relief for low-income households

Arrival disc

DDS tax rate

Under 30,000 EUR/year

5% (today: ~10%)

30,000 – 60,000

15% (unchanged)

60,000 – 120,000

25% (unchanged)

120,000 – 300,000

35% (slightly up)

Over 300,000 EUR

45% (new level)

Capital gains over 50,000 EUR

25% (new, today almost 0%)

6.2.4 Transparency and citizen control of the state budget

DDS proposes the introduction of a mandatory citizen review of the state budget:

6.3 Combating corruption and state capitalism

Luxembourg does not have a systematic corruption problem in the traditional sense. But it does have a systematic problem of the 'capture' of public policy by private interests. DDS proposes:

7. SOCIAL PROGRAM: A country for everyone, not just for the rich

7.1 The housing crisis: Fundamental solution

The housing crisis in Luxembourg is not a natural disaster. It is the direct result of a political agenda that has, over decades, placed the interests of speculators and large property owners above those of ordinary citizens. It can be solved — if there is political will.

7.1.1 Massive expansion of social housing

Today, social housing accounts for only 2% of Luxembourg's stock — one of the lowest rates in the entire EU. DDS sets a target of 15% in 10 years.

7.1.2 Regulation of the rental market

7.2 Health care

Luxembourg has a relatively good public health service (CNS), but with growing deficits:

DDS PROPOSAL: Full public healthcare. No privatization of basic healthcare. ddsAI for more precise diagnosis, recognition of spillover effects and optimization of resources. Mandatory preventive program for all citizens. Digital health passport for all Luxembourgers (completely under data protection and control of the citizen himself, not of private corporations).

7.3 Education and youth

Luxembourg's education system is complex due to its multilingualism (Luxembourgish, French, German, English) and extremely diverse student body. But it also has systemic problems:

DDS PROPOSAL: Integrate ddsAI into all levels of education for personalized curricula. Free digital materials and broadband for all students. Mentoring programs through DDS microgroups — adults accompany youth. Mandatory political and democratic awareness in school from grade 5 — with DDS materials developed from genuine citizen participation.

7.4 Environment and climate protection

Despite its small size, Luxembourg has one of the highest CO2 emissions per capita in the EU. This is mainly due to massive fuel tourism (diesel and gasoline are cheaper than in neighboring countries) and high car use.

7.5 Integration and multiculturalism

Luxembourg is one of the most multicultural countries in Europe — more than 47% of the population are residents of foreign origin. This is an asset, but also a challenge:

DDS proposes: Every legal resident of Luxembourg, regardless of nationality, must have full access to all services, education and social benefits. Integration programs are organized through DDS microgroups in a participatory manner: residents helping residents. Cross-border workers — who make up 47% of the labor market — are given a formal right to consultation in decisions that directly affect them.

8. ANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES OF THE DDS PROGRAM

8.1 Short-term (0-2 years)

Initial resistance is normal and expected: established interests will fight against DDS reform proposals. DDS is prepared for this and responds with more transparency, more citizen mobilization and more concrete results.

8.2 Medium term (2-5 years)

8.3 Long-term (5-15 years)

9. PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION: First steps

9.1 How we approach

DDS invites all citizens of Luxembourg — whether Luxembourgers, EU residents or legal residents — to register as a member. Each member receives:

  1. His personal three-code system for secure and verified participation
  2. Access to the ddsAI platform with neutral, complete and independent information on all political and economic topics
  3. Integration into a local micro-group (5 people) in his/her municipality or neighborhood
  4. Right to participate in all votes, proposals and decisions of DDS
  5. Full transparency about one's own participation, one's points (meritocratic system) and the activities of one's group

9.2 What DDS requires

DDS is not a traditional party that accepts your deposit and then leaves you in the lurch. DDS demands from every member: commitment, respect, willingness to learn and concrete participation. In return, every member receives: power, information, solidarity and a truly democratic voice.

9.3 The difference from other parties

Dimension

 

Traditional parties

DirectDemocracyS (DDS)

Elections every 5 years

Continuous participation

Decisions of elites

Decisions of the people themselves

Financed by corporations and lobbies

Funded only by members

Program created by party functionaries

Program created by all members

Representation by proxy

Direct participation

Citizens are passive recipients

Citizens are active decision-makers

Information controlled by media

Information through neutral ddsAI

10. CONCLUSION: Luxembourg, The Day of True Democracy

Luxembourg is at a crossroads. The country can continue on its current path: a super-rich, but stratified and democratically deficient country, where the rich work for a minority, where housing unaffordability is becoming increasingly drastic, where citizens vote every 5 years and otherwise have no real say.

Or it can choose: real democracy. Continuous participation. Competence. Transparency. True justice. Not as a utopian dream — but as a concrete, precise and effectively implemented DDS program.

The rule is simple and absolute: The assets of Luxembourg — its land, its finances, its public services, its wealth — must remain forever and exclusively with the Luxembourgish people. No private interest can be more important than the interests of all citizens together.

DirectDemocracyS invites you in — not as a passive follower, but as an active co-creator of your country's future.

DirectDemocracyS — Luxembourg

www.directdemocracys.org

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