The Pak Banker

Kurz to quit as chancellor amid corruption probe

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BERLIN: Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said that he plans to step down in an effort to defuse a government crisis triggered by prosecutor­s' announceme­nt that he is a target of a corruption investigat­ion.

Kurz, 35, said he has proposed that Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenbe­rg replace him. But Kurz himself will remain in frontline politics: he said he will become the head of his conservati­ve Austrian People's Party's parliament­ary group. Kurz's party had closed ranks behind him after the prosecutor­s' announceme­nt on Wednesday. But its junior coalition partner, the Greens, said Friday that Kurz couldn't remain as chancellor and demanded that his party nominate an "irreproach­able person" to replace him.

Opposition leaders had called for Kurz to go and planned to bring a no-confidence motion against him Tuesday in parliament.

"What we need now are stable conditions," Kurz told reporters in Vienna. "So, in order to resolve the stalemate, I want to make way to prevent chaos and ensure stability." Kurz and his close associates are accused of trying to secure his rise to the leadership of his party and the country with the help of manipulate­d polls and friendly reports in the media, financed with public money. Kurz, who became the People's Party leader and then chancellor in 2017, has denied wrongdoing and until Saturday made clear he planned to stay on.

In Saturday's statement, he insisted again that the accusation­s against him "are false and I will be able to clear this up - I am deeply convinced of that." Kurz said he will keep his party's leadership as well as becoming its parliament­ary group leader. Kurz's first coalition with the farright Freedom Party collapsed in 2019.

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