IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Austria Heads for Snap Parliamentary Election With Far-Right Making Gains

An election will give the far-right Freedom Party a good chance of entering government less than a year after its candidate lost a presidential run-off.
Image: Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern
Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern speaks during a statement in Vienna, Austria, on Wednesday.LISI NIESNER / EPA
/ Source: Reuters

VIENNA — Austria is heading for a snap parliamentary election after the center-left chancellor said on Sunday the ruling coalition had been shattered by his ambitious young foreign minister, who is poised to take over the main conservative party.

An election will give the far-right Freedom Party (FPO) a good chance of entering national government less than a year after its candidate lost a presidential run-off.

The FPO is leading in opinion polls and the two centrist parties that have dominated post-war politics in Austria are now at daggers drawn.

Image: Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern
Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern speaks during a statement in Vienna, Austria, on Wednesday.LISI NIESNER / EPA

But surveys suggest the conservative People's Party (OVP) would leap from third to first place, and support for the FPO and Chancellor Christian Kern's Social Democrats would fall, if Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz took over as OVP leader, as he is expected to do. Forming a government usually requires at least two parties.

"There will definitely ... be an election, I assume in the coming autumn," Kern said in an interview with ORF TV. He had resisted the idea of a snap election, calling for the coalition to keep working until its term ends in more than a year's time.

Kurz, 30, is a star of Austrian politics who is widely seen as his party's best hope of reviving its fortunes. The current OVP leader, Reinhold Mitterlehner, announced on Wednesday that he was stepping down, partly because of his inability to stop in-fighting among his ministers.

Image: Austria's Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz
Austria's Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz addresses a news conference in Vienna, Austria, on Friday.LEONHARD FOEGER / Reuters

Kurz said on Friday that he wanted a snap election but that he would only accept the OVP's top job if it came with sweeping powers on issues including staffing. The OVP leadership was due to meet on Sunday at 4 p.m. local time (12 p.m. ET) to pick Mitterlehner's successor.

"The OVP ended the coalition on Friday," Kern said, referring to Kurz's speech. Calling a snap election requires a majority in parliament. The FPO supports the idea — it and the OVP are three seats short of a majority.

Divided Parties

Kern accused the OVP and Kurz of failing to honor the commitment they made in January to a package of measures that was aimed at breathing new life into the coalition and eroding support for the FPO, but which failed to put an end to squabbling that has marred the centrist coalition.

That package included a series of law-and-order measures such as a ban on Muslim face-covering veils in public places. Kurz has made a tough line on immigration one of his hallmarks, to the point that the FPO has accused him of stealing its ideas.

Image: Former presidential candidate Norbert Hofer
Former presidential candidate Norbert Hofer of the Austrian Freedom Party (FPO) who was rejected by Austrian voters last year. HEINZ-PETER BADER / Reuters

"It was the case from the first day onwards that there was a group within the OVP that wanted to work with us constructively ... and then there were some who were less interested in this government succeeding. They have now prevailed within the OVP," Kern said.

Although his party has been moving towards lifting a self-imposed ban on national coalitions with the FPO, Kern would not be drawn on whether it might go into government with the far right, as it already has in one of Austria's nine provinces.

"A working relationship with the Freedom Party would be a novelty for the SPO and we will therefore now discuss that internally in a sensitive way," Kern said, alluding to a deep split within the party on the issue.