Jobs & Economy
Infrastructure, investment, entrepreneurship, agriculture, tourism, manufacturing, technology, and skills development should expand opportunity and dignity.
Unity - Heritage - Progress
The proposal must answer practical questions about jobs, services, public money, social protection, citizenship, and inclusion.

Public Priorities
Infrastructure, investment, entrepreneurship, agriculture, tourism, manufacturing, technology, and skills development should expand opportunity and dignity.
Public spending must be transparent, budgets accountable, corruption prevented, and infrastructure funding clearly justified.
Access to schools, higher education, healthcare investment, rural development, and youth opportunity must be central to public policy.
Social grants, disability support, elderly care, and protection for vulnerable communities must be planned with dignity and sustainability.
Constitutional citizenship must protect legal rights, inclusion, multilingual recognition, and multicultural belonging.
Economic Programme
Economic development must be connected to dignity. A constitutional framework should support a public environment where entrepreneurs can register businesses, farmers can access markets, young people can gain skills, investors can understand the rules, and communities can see infrastructure plans before money is spent.
Priority sectors include agriculture, logistics, tourism, light manufacturing, digital services, renewable energy, cultural industries, and local construction. Each sector requires predictable regulation, anti-corruption controls, land-use clarity, skills development, and practical partnerships with communities.
Public economic policy should be measured by outcomes: jobs created, roads maintained, water systems improved, small businesses supported, young people trained, and rural communities connected to opportunity.
Services and Social Rights
A constitutional future must improve the lived experience of families. Schools, clinics, emergency services, social support, and youth opportunities are not abstract policy areas; they are daily measures of whether government serves the people.
Education policy should prioritize early learning, school safety, teacher support, digital access, vocational training, higher education pathways, and civic literacy. Healthcare policy should prioritize primary care, rural clinics, maternal health, emergency treatment, medicine supply, and accountable facility management.
Social protection should focus on elderly persons, children, persons with disabilities, unemployed households, and vulnerable communities, while also building long-term pathways into work, skills, entrepreneurship, and community resilience.
Submit comments on rights, institutions, economic planning, or other draft elements for moderation and review.