This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . The next check for changes will be
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/feb/27/austria-centrist-parties-deal-form-government-without-far-right
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Austrian centrist parties reach deal to form government without far right | Austrian centrist parties reach deal to form government without far right |
(32 minutes later) | |
Christian Stocker, the ÖVP leader, says ‘common programme’ has been agreed with SPÖ and Neos | Christian Stocker, the ÖVP leader, says ‘common programme’ has been agreed with SPÖ and Neos |
Five months after the far-right Freedom party (FPÖ) finished first in parliamentary elections, Austria’s three leading centrist parties have reached agreement to form a new government without it. | |
The centre-right People’s party (ÖVP), the Social Democrats (SPÖ) and the liberal Neos, whose first attempt at forming a coalition failed in January, unveiled a 200-page programme aimed mainly at reviving the country’s ailing economy and cutting its budget deficit. | |
Christian Stocker, the ÖVP leader and likely next chancellor, said on Thursday a “common programme” had been agreed with the SPÖ and liberals, adding that the three parties had been working “around the clock” to finalise an accord. | Christian Stocker, the ÖVP leader and likely next chancellor, said on Thursday a “common programme” had been agreed with the SPÖ and liberals, adding that the three parties had been working “around the clock” to finalise an accord. |
The agreement ends months of uncertainty after the FPÖ’s historic election victory, when it gained almost 29% of the vote. After the mainstream parties’ unsuccessful effort, the ÖVP entered talks with the FPÖ, which also broke down this month. | |
They would have produced Austria’s first far-right-led government since the second world war, perhaps led by the Moscow-friendly, anti-EU FPÖ president, Herbert Kickl, who campaigned for mass “remigration” and an end to aid to Ukraine. | They would have produced Austria’s first far-right-led government since the second world war, perhaps led by the Moscow-friendly, anti-EU FPÖ president, Herbert Kickl, who campaigned for mass “remigration” and an end to aid to Ukraine. |
The negotiations foundered, however, over various disagreements including on EU and asylum policy, as well as the FPÖ’s insistence that it wanted control of both the interior and finance ministries, a demand the ÖVP rejected out of hand. | The negotiations foundered, however, over various disagreements including on EU and asylum policy, as well as the FPÖ’s insistence that it wanted control of both the interior and finance ministries, a demand the ÖVP rejected out of hand. |
With the country without a government for the longest stretch in its modern history, President Alexander Van der Bellen had called on all three party leaders to reach a deal as quickly as possible. Ministerial roles are expected to be announced on Friday. | With the country without a government for the longest stretch in its modern history, President Alexander Van der Bellen had called on all three party leaders to reach a deal as quickly as possible. Ministerial roles are expected to be announced on Friday. |
Stocker said the negotiations since September had been “perhaps the most difficult in the history of our country”. Austria’s challenges were “historic and far-reaching”, he said, including war in Ukraine, a flagging economy and pressure from migration. | Stocker said the negotiations since September had been “perhaps the most difficult in the history of our country”. Austria’s challenges were “historic and far-reaching”, he said, including war in Ukraine, a flagging economy and pressure from migration. |
Stocker took over the ÖVP leadership earlier this year after the former chancellor Karl Nehammer resigned when the first round of three-way coalition talks failed. Stocker is a 64-year-old lawyer who spent three decades in local politics and became an MP in 2019. | |
The coalition deal calls for strict new asylum rules, “return centres” to house rejected asylum seekers and the suspension of family reunification. Stocker said: “If the number of asylum applications increases, we reserve the right to impose a freeze.” | |
The parties’ programme also promises they will work out a “constitutional legal ban on headscarves”. It emphasises, however, that Austria’s new government remains “committed to a strong and better European Union”. | The parties’ programme also promises they will work out a “constitutional legal ban on headscarves”. It emphasises, however, that Austria’s new government remains “committed to a strong and better European Union”. |
Sign up to This is Europe | Sign up to This is Europe |
The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment | The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment |
after newsletter promotion | after newsletter promotion |
The ÖVP and SPÖ have often governed Austria together in the past in a “grand coalition”, but have the slimmest possible majority in the new parliament, with a combined 92 of the 183 seats. The addition of Neos brings 18 more. | The ÖVP and SPÖ have often governed Austria together in the past in a “grand coalition”, but have the slimmest possible majority in the new parliament, with a combined 92 of the 183 seats. The addition of Neos brings 18 more. |
The deal still needs formal approval by the leadership of the two larger parties and two-thirds of Neos members at a convention scheduled for Sunday. | The deal still needs formal approval by the leadership of the two larger parties and two-thirds of Neos members at a convention scheduled for Sunday. |
The political analyst Thomas Hofer said the three-way coalition was expected “not to cause any major waves”. But he said the parties faced huge problems, not least their popularity ratings, with the ÖVP down to 19% from the 26% it scored in September. | |
The FPÖ, which has gained popularity since the election and is now polling at nearly 35%, would be likely to win a new vote even more comfortably. Kickl has dismissed the new government as a “coalition of losers” and called for a snap ballot. | The FPÖ, which has gained popularity since the election and is now polling at nearly 35%, would be likely to win a new vote even more comfortably. Kickl has dismissed the new government as a “coalition of losers” and called for a snap ballot. |
Previous version
1
Next version