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Following recent local elections
Conservatives and Greens form coalition government in Upper
Austria
By Markus Salzmann
19 November 2003
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Only weeks after regional elections in Upper Austria, the conservative
Austrian Peoples Party (ÖVP) and the Green Party have agreed
to form a local coalition government. This decision will accelerate
these parties joining forces on a national level.
In elections held in Austrias third biggest state, the
ÖVP and Jörg Haiders ultra-right Freedom Party
(FP)the two parties forming the national coalition governmentsuffered
considerable losses, paying the penalty for the continuous cuts
that have been made to the Austrian welfare state. The Social
Democrats (SPÖ) and the Greens were able to make gains as
a result of popular discontent with policies carried out by the
government in Vienna.
For the first time, the Greens overtook the FP and become the
third strongest party behind the SPÖ and the ÖVP. The
votes they gained were for the most part bound up with the hopes
of many voters that the Greens would act as a counterweight to
the ruthless policies carried out by the government of Chancellor
Wolfgang Schüssel (ÖVP). The fact that the Greens are
now ignoring the mandate of their voters and are helping a conservative
minister president to power reveals their true political character.
Together with their sister party in neighbouring Germany, the
Austrian Greens are offering their services as a reliable prop
for bourgeois rule.
The regional executive of the Greens came to a remarkably quick
agreement with the ÖVP. To prevent protests on behalf of
the rank and file, the membership of the party wasnt informed
about the development of negotiations until they had been concluded.
The Greens party chairman, Alexander van der Bellen, expressly
advocated an ÖVP-Green coalition. He congratulated Rudi Anschober,
the partys regional chairman in Upper Austria, for forming
a coalition with the conservatives and declared that Anschober
enjoys his full confidence.
The 42-year-old Anschober, who has for a long time advocated
the Greens moving closer to the ÖVP, is characteristic of
the Greens evolutionand not only in Austria. The son
of an ÖVP-councillor, he began his political career as a
member of an action group opposing atomic power. Following the
catastrophe in Chernobyl in 1986, many people who later were to
become members of the Greens felt threatened by the construction
of an atomic power plant in neighbouring Temelin.
Anschober joined the Greens and also wrote for the German daily
paper Tageszeitung (taz). As a result of his long
involvement within the anti-atomic power movement, he was elected
to the Austrian parliament in 1990 and became the Green Partys
spokesman for atomic and security policies. In 1997, he retired
to regional politics and steered the Greens within Upper Austria
onto a rightward course; and for the first time, he became a member
of a regional parliament.
Hardly any political friction could be seen when, in the middle
of October, Anschober and minister president Josef Pühringer
presented the first conservative-Green government programme. Both
declared that the first priority was sustainable financial
policies with a balanced budget and made clear that in their
opinion there is only one way to repair the budget deficit: decisive
cuts in social services. Under the slogan free of debts,
the most intensive attacks on the welfare state have been carried
out by the federal minister of finance Karl Heinz Grasser (former
FP member, now independent). Anschober gives the impression that
he completely identifies with the political course of the ÖVP.
The only prerequisite demanded by him during negotiations was
a slightly larger environmental department for the Green Party.
All the attempts made by representatives of the ÖVP and
the Greens to play down the significance of this coalition and
to portray it as resulting from special circumstances on a regional
level cannot hide the fact that a conservative-Green coalition
is also seen as a possibility in Vienna.
The state secretary Helmut Kuckaka (ÖVP) has explicitly
stated that an ÖVP-Green coalition is a possibility
on a national level. An increasing number of leading ÖVP
members are thinking about a change in midstream of
their coalition partner in Vienna (i.e., replacing the FP with
the Greens before the next elections). For a long time now, business
circles have been unhappy with the current coalition, and especially
with the FP.
At the beginning of this year, the Greens already made clear
that they were not in principle opposed to collaborating with
the ÖVP on a national level when they offered to form a coalition
with Chancellor Schüssel. And now again, high-ranking Greens,
among them vice-chair Eva Glawischning, have expressed their approval
of a conservative-Green coalition government.
The actions and words of party spokesman van der Bellen have
revealed the extent to which the possibility of the Green Party
forming part of a coalition on a national level is taken seriously.
He has begun to distribute future jobs and government offices,
and has explained that some obstacles may exist regarding
a conservative-Green coalition, but that he will take over the
job as party whip.
The majority of the political and economic establishment view
Haiders FP as unusable for the moment because of its endless
internal squabbles, scandals and general political instability.
Haiders party has done its jobat least for the time
beingand has pushed the entire Austrian political spectrum
far to the right. The FP is in a severe crisis, having lost support
from big business and the media, but also as a result of severe
losses in recent elections. Herbert Haupt had to yield the job
of vice-chancellor to Hubert Gorbach, and now Haiders sister,
Ursula Haubner, has taken over the job as party chair.
Despite these moves, Chancellor Schüssel still confronts
the danger that the internal crisis and power struggles inside
the FP could rapidly cause his government to fall apart, as it
did last year.
The Greens view the crisis of the FP as their big chance and
hope to take its place alongside the conservatives. Apparently,
they are not disturbed by the fact that the conservatives have
already to a large degree adopted the policies of the FPexemplified
in the new asylum law passed by parliament that severely restricts
the rights of refugees. Justifiably, refugee and human rights
organisations sharply criticised this law as a violation of both
the European Human Rights and Geneva Convention for Refugees.
They aim to institute proceedings against this law at the Austrian
constitutional court.
The new law reduces the time period during which a decision
has to be made regarding an application for asylum to 72 hours.
And if the application is rejected, there is to be no further
protection against deportation. This means that a refugee can
be deported even if he or she has appealed the authorities
decision. In addition, no further claims or arguments can be made
after the 72-hour period has passed, and the measures will considerably
worsen the prospects of refugees at the Austrian border.
Instead of opposing this law, the Greens van der Bellen
is offering his own proposal regarding the asylum laws, which
in fact aim to tighten these laws even further. He demands a fixed
quota of immigrants to be taken in and the establishment of additional
criteria, so that everybody knows if they have a chance
to be accepted. This demand mainly aims to make it possible
for low-paid, well-trained workers to enter Austriasomething
in the interests of big business.
The Austrian Greens decision to join a coalition in a
region were they have traditionally claimed to represent a progressive
alternative demonstrates how far to the right this party has moved.
They are also offering to be a reliable partner with Schüssel
in the field of fiscal and taxation policies. The chancellor has
been demanding for some time now that taxes for companies and
people with big incomes be lowered. Although recently published
research on the taxation of assets established that Austria collects
the lowest level of taxes in Europe, Schüssel is now aiming
to implement further tax cuts for the rich. For its own populist
purposes, the FP is at least attempting to block this. The Greens,
on the other hand, have already made clear that they will not
oppose further tax cuts for the rich.
See Also:
Austria: Greens bid for coalition
with conservative ÖVP
[7 January 2003]
On eve of national
elections: Austrias Social Democrats, Greens shift to the
right
[23 November 2002]
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