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Austria’s conservatives open to coalition talks with far-right

UPDATE: New leader of Austria’s ruling conservatives open to coalition talks with far-right

18:36, 05.01.2025
  aa/jd;
UPDATE: New leader of Austria’s ruling conservatives open to coalition talks with far-right The new leader of Austria’s ruling conservatives has said that he expects the far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) to be tasked with forming a government, adding that his party is ready to engage in coalition talks with FPÖ.

The new leader of Austria’s ruling conservatives has said that he expects the far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) to be tasked with forming a government, adding that his party is ready to engage in coalition talks with FPÖ.

Christian Stocker has served as general secretary of the People’s Party since 2022. Photo: X/@_CStocker
Christian Stocker has served as general secretary of the People’s Party since 2022. Photo: X/@_CStocker

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Christian Stocker made the remarks on Sunday after being appointed as the interim leader of Austria’s People’s Party (ÖVP).

His appointment came after Chancellor Karl Nehammer announced on Saturday that he would resign in the coming days after his attempts to form a coalition government without the far-right fell apart.

Nehammer had led three- and then two-party talks aimed at forging a centrist coalition that could serve as a bulwark against the FPÖ after the eurosceptic, Russia-friendly party came first in September’s parliamentary election.

Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Stocker said: “I expect that the leader of the party with the most votes will be tasked with forming a future government. If we are invited to these [coalition] talks, we will accept this invitation.”

Stocker, who had previously echoed Nehammer’s position of not governing with FPÖ leader Herbert Kickl, said things had now changed, adding: “It is not about Herbert Kickl or me, but about the fact that this country needs a stable government right now and that we cannot keep losing time in election campaigns or elections.”

President Alexander Van der Bellen, a former leader of the left-wing Greens who has voiced reservations about Kickl becoming chancellor, angered the FPÖ by not asking it to form a government after the election on the grounds that no other party was willing to join it in a coalition.

While saying the situation had now changed, Van der Bellen stopped short of saying he would ask Kickl to lead coalition talks. He is due to meet Kickl at 11 a.m. (1000 GMT) on Monday and a new caretaker chancellor will also be appointed in the coming week, with Nehammer staying in office until then.

“Voices within the People’s Party that rule out cooperation with an FPÖ under Herbert Kickl have become much quieter. This in turn means that a new path may be opening up that did not exist before,” Van der Bellen said in an address to the nation.

Growing support for FPÖ

If Kickl is tasked with leading coalition talks, his party could secure a parliamentary majority and lead a government for the first time since it was formed in the 1950s under a leader who had been a senior SS officer and Nazi lawmaker.

The collapse of the centrist coalition talks in Austria highlights the growing difficulty for centrist parties in many European countries in forming stable governments without a far right that is gaining ground.

The FPÖ won September’s election with about 29% of the vote, and opinion polls suggest its support has grown since then, extending its lead over the ÖVP and Social Democrats to more than 10 percentage points while their support has shrunk.

Nehammer said during and after the election campaign that his party would not govern with Kickl because he was too much of a conspiracy theorist and posed a security risk, while at the same time saying much of Kickl’s party was trustworthy.

The ÖVP and FPÖ overlap on various issues, particularly taking a tough line on immigration, to the point that the FPÖ has accused the ÖVP of stealing its ideas.

The two governed together from late 2017 until 2019, when a video-sting scandal involving the then-leader of the FPÖ prompted their coalition's collapse.