The Jerusalem Post

New Austrian leader under attack, called Kurz’s puppet

- • By FRANCOIS MURPHY

VIenna (reuters) – opposition parties attacked austria’s new chancellor alexander schallenbe­rg on tuesday over his ties to his predecesso­r sebastian Kurz, who quit over corruption allegation­s, while activists outside parliament mocked him as Kurz’s puppet.

Kurz, 35, quit as chancellor under pressure from his junior coalition party, the Greens, after prosecutor­s placed him and nine others including close aides under investigat­ion on suspicion of various degrees of bribery, corruption and breach of trust. he denies any wrongdoing.

Kurz remains leader of his conservati­ve oVp party and is now also its top lawmaker in parliament. schallenbe­rg, 52, a career diplomat and a relative newcomer to politics, has said he will work closely with his predecesso­r, and opposition parties say he will just carry out Kurz’s orders.

“he who follows blindly cannot lead,” the leader of the opposition social democrats (spo), pamela rendi-Wagner, said during a special session of the lower house of parliament, called in response to Kurz being placed under investigat­ion.

outside parliament, the socialist youth, which is close to the spo, set up an installati­on that depicted schallenbe­rg as a puppet, with Kurz pulling his strings.

opposition parties accuse Kurz of presiding over a network that flouted rules on issues ranging from party funding to appointmen­ts to state posts.

“you [Kurz] bought yourself a party and carried out a putsch within the party .... all that counted was power,” the leader of the liberal neos party, beate meinl-reisinger, told parliament.

It is unclear whether the conservati­ves’ current coalition with the Greens can last until the next election, due in 2024, or whether the current setup, with Kurz remaining as the conservati­ves’ parliament­ary leader, can be sustained.

the Greens, who pressured Kurz to resign on saturday, had campaigned for greater transparen­cy in politics. they say they hope the coalition can return to “calmer waters”.

anti-corruption prosecutor­s say they suspect conservati­ve officials then in the Finance ministry of using state funds to pay for manipulate­d polling and coverage favorable to Kurz to appear in a newspaper starting in 2016, when he was seeking to become party leader. he succeeded and won an election in 2017 with pledges to take a hard line on immigratio­n.

Kurz, who is also under investigat­ion separately for perjury, says all the allegation­s against him are false. he did not attend tuesday’s debate.

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