Conservatives win Austrian election as far-right tumbles

Published September 30, 2019
Sebastian Kurz, leader of Austria's People's party (OeVP) and his girlfriend Susanne Thier (2ndL) leave the polling station after voting during snap elections in Vienna, Austria, on September 29. — AFP
Sebastian Kurz, leader of Austria's People's party (OeVP) and his girlfriend Susanne Thier (2ndL) leave the polling station after voting during snap elections in Vienna, Austria, on September 29. — AFP

VIENNA: Austrian conservatives won the most seats in snap elections on Sunday, putting their 33-year-old leader Sebastian Kurz on track to retake power but forcing him into tough coalition negotiations after a corruption scandal sent his far-right former allies tumbling.

Kurz’s People’s Party (OeVP) won 37 percent, up almost six percentage points from the last election two years ago, but not enough to form a government on its own, according to projections based on partial results.

The Greens were also big winners as climate change rose to the top of voters’ concerns, securing around 14 percent of the vote.

That means they will be viable coalition partners for a new government, but Green leader Werner Kogler said on Sunday evening that the party would need to see “radical change” from the right-wing policies pursued by the previous coalition.

Kurz’s former allies, the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe), were the biggest losers of the night, falling 10 percentage points to around 16 percent following the spectacular “Ibiza-gate” corruption scandal in May.

The affair brought down the OeVP-FPOe coalition after just 18 months in government and triggered Sunday’s snap poll.

The centre-left Social Democrats look set for their worst-ever result on around 22 percent of the vote, with the liberal NEOS party winning around seven percent.

A total of 6.4 million people were eligible to vote in the small Alpine country.

Kurz told jubilant supporters at party headquarters on Sunday evening that the scale of the victory had left him “almost speechless”, but gave few clues as to his next moves.

Before the election, Kurz — a former law student, who has enjoyed a rapid ascent through the ranks to become the youngest-ever chancellor in 2017 — said he would keep all options open.

“It is a big responsibility. We accept this trust humbly and respectfully, and I promise we will do our best to honour this trust,” Kurz said.

The FPOe took a bigger hit than expected following the “Ibiza-gate” scandal which brought down its long-time leader Heinz-Christian Strache and a fresh investigation against him announced this week — this time over alleged fraudulent expense claims.

Published in Dawn, September 30th, 2019

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