The Jewish Chronicle

Far-right scandal triggers Austrian snap election

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“DEMOCRACY WINS!” Austria’s Jewish community president Oskar Deutsch declared over the weekend, after the country’s coalition government collapsed following corruption allegation­s which led to Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache’s resignatio­n.

Late on Friday, two German newspapers published a candid video filmed in Ibiza in July 2017 that showed Mr Strache, who leads the Freedom Party (FPÖ), and his chief whip Johann Gudenus offering future state contracts to a woman they believed to be the niece of a Russian oligarch in return for her financial support.

The following day, Mr Strache resigned and Chancellor Sebastian Kurz dissolved his coalition with the far-right to seek new elections. By Monday evening, his government had collapsed after the remaining Freedom Party ministers resigned and sought to move a vote of no confidence in Mr Kurz in parliament.

Mr Deutsch said recent political developmen­ts had confirmed the Jewish community was right in its boycott of FPÖ ministers, instituted when the government was formed in December 2017, and praised the community for remaining united even as party supporters “actively worked against” them. Incidents of far-right extremism in the FPÖ during their time in office had confirmed the community’s worst fears, Mr Deutsch added, calling on its members to vote for “proEuropea­n parties” in the upcoming elections for the European Parliament on May 26. Bini Guttmann, president of the Austrian Union of Jewish Students, also welcomed new elections in the wake of the Ibiza tapes, arguing that because of their “connection­s to neo-Nazis”, the FPÖ “should never have been allowed in the government.” Mr Kurz, he concluded, bore ultimate responsibi­lity for this crisis.

Yet Mr Strache’s resignatio­n speech saw him return to a familiar target — the notorious Israeli policy consultant Tal Silberstei­n, who was previously a media advisor to the opposition Social Democrats until he was arrested in Israel in 2017 on suspicion of money laundering and corruption. The FPÖ leader claimed he had been the victim of “Silberstei­nstyle dirty tactics and disinforma­tion campaigns” in recent years and that the Ibiza videos were a political assassinat­ion and “commission­ed work” worthy of Mr Silberstei­n himself.

For Mr Deutsch, the resignatio­n speech was a perpetuati­on of “antisemiti­c conspiracy theories”. The journalist Karl Pfeifer commented: “The corrupt ethno-nationalis­t rabble only has one answer: Silberstei­n.”

But the Chancellor also floated Mr Silberstei­n’s name — as a possible source of the candid videos. In an interview with the German tabloid Bild, Mr Kurz said the tapes “reminded him of the work of Silberstei­n”, who “used similar methods all over the world.”

Speaking to Austrian state broadcaste­r ORF, novelist and political activist Doron Rabinovici warned politician­s were playing a “completely irresponsi­ble game” with antisemiti­c stereotype­s, calling the suggestion of Mr Silberstei­n’s involvemen­t unstatesma­nlike.

He noted Mr Kurz had previously called the 2017 election a “referendum on whether we want any Silberstei­ns in Austria” and that members of the Jewish community aligned to his People’s Party warned him then against such utterances.

The snap election will most likely take place in early or mid-September. Early elections will be held at the

The Jewish community was right to boycott FPÖ ministers’

same time in the state of Burgenland, where the Social Democrats had been in coalition with the Freedom Party since 2015.

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 ??  ?? Some celebrated the resignatio­n
Some celebrated the resignatio­n
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 ?? ALL PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Austria’s president is depicted by a demonstrat­or on Saturday disposing a swastika in a rubbish bin
ALL PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Austria’s president is depicted by a demonstrat­or on Saturday disposing a swastika in a rubbish bin

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