The Jerusalem Post

Austria’s conservati­ve shift opens path to power for far Right

- • By MICHAEL SHIELDS and FRANCOIS MURPHY

VIENNA (Reuters) – Austria’s shift to the Right in a parliament­ary election has paved the way for young conservati­ve star Sebastian Kurz to become the country’s next leader and opened a path for the resurgent far Right to return to power.

The People’s Party, which named 31-yearold Foreign Minister Kurz its leader only in May, secured a clear victory on Sunday with a hard line on immigratio­n that left little space between it and the anti-Islam Freedom Party (FPO).

That party was founded by former Nazis and is a sister to France’s National Front and Germany’s AfD, both of which were also buoyed by voter concerns about Europe’s migration crisis in 2015.

Kurz is well short of a majority and will probably need a coalition partner to govern. Having pledged to move away from often deadlocked coalitions with the center-left, like the one currently in power, an alliance with the FPO is likely.

Austria was a gateway into Germany for more than a million people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East and elsewhere in 2015. It made the neutral country fertile ground for parties out to halt the influx.

That propelled Kurz into first place ahead of his current coalition partners, Chancellor Christian Kern’s Social Democrats. The FPO and Social Democrats were in a close race for second. That will be settled by a record number of postal ballots which were being counted on Monday.

Kurz champions tough enforcemen­t of the EU’s borders. He helped broker border restrictio­ns through the Balkans that largely shut what was then the main migrant route into Europe. He has, however, kept his coalition options open.

“Neither a coalition with the FPO nor one with the SPO has been agreed upon,” Kurz told broadcaste­r ORF shortly after projection­s showed his party had won Sunday’s election.

But the likelihood of the FPO entering government with Kurz’s conservati­ves for the first time since 2000 concerned politician­s across Europe.

At that time, a horrified European Union slapped short-lived sanctions on Austria for letting the FPO share power. The party was then led by the late Joerg Haider, who gained infamy for praising the employment policies of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, who was born in Austria.

Austria’s shift to the Right came after German voters last month punished Chancellor Angela Merkel’s open-door policy for migrants, pushing her conservati­ve bloc to its worst showing since 1949 and putting the far-right AfD party in parliament.

Merkel said the strong FPO showing was a “big challenge” for other parties and she hoped for close cooperatio­n with Kurz at a European level.

Alexander Lambsdorff, a senior member of Germany’s pro-business Free Democrats, a possible coalition partner for Merkel, called the Austrian election results “a wake-up call for refugee policy that we finally have to organize together... An orderly refugee policy is what people want in Austria, in Germany, in other European countries.”

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto congratula­ted Kurz for his win, welcoming his stance on migration as close to that of Budapest. He said he expected anti-immigratio­n Eastern EU states Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic to work more closely with Austria now.

Kurz is on track to become one of the world’s youngest leaders after securing around 32% of the vote. His hard line resonated with many voters who felt Austria was overrun in the migration crisis by taking in roughly 1% of its population in asylum-seekers in 2015.

Under current leader Heinz-Christian Strache, the FPO has become a more mainstream party and has sought to rid its ranks of antisemiti­sm, focusing instead on fighting political Islam.

But the FPO has had to throw out party officials on a regular basis in Nazi-related scandals.

The biggest opposition party in parliament serves in two provincial and several local government­s. It has dropped calls to consider leaving the EU or abandoning the euro currency.

Still, World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder, who was the US ambassador to Austria from 1986 to 1987, called for the Freedom Party to be kept out of national government.

“It is sad and distressin­g that such a platform should receive more than a quarter of the vote,” he said in a statement.

Any coalition between two of the top three parties is possible since the SPO has lifted a self-imposed ban on coalitions with the FPO. But if the Social Democrats come in third, it is unlikely to form an alliance with the FPO that would make Strache chancellor.

Kern’s Social Democrats appear split on how to proceed. Years of bickering with their coalition partner, the People’s Party, has left their alliance in deadlock and prompted Kurz to force Sunday’s snap election.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? AN ELECTION campaign poster shows Sebastian Kurz of the People’s Party opposite the Austrian parliament building in Vienna on Sunday.
(Reuters) AN ELECTION campaign poster shows Sebastian Kurz of the People’s Party opposite the Austrian parliament building in Vienna on Sunday.

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