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State elections in Upper Austria and Tyrol
Austrian voters reject governments attacks on welfare
state
By Markus Salzmann
25 October 2003
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The regional elections in Upper Austria and Tyrol on September
28 were not only another disaster for the right-wing Liberal Party
(FP), but also made apparent the widespread rejection of the anti-social
policies of right-wing/conservative ÖVP/FP (Austrian Peoples
Party, Austrian Freedom Party) coalition government. These were
the first elections following the pension cuts carried through
by Chancellor Schüssels (OVP) government despite mass
protests.
The election results were clearly a blow against the FP. In
Upper Austria, the party lost 12 percent of its vote, only gaining
8.4 percent. The Peoples Party (43.4 percent) got about the same
vote as they had received five years ago, and it is expected that
Joseph Pühringer (ÖVP) will remain prime minister of
the region. Both the Greens, who now are the third strongest party
with 9.1 percent, and the Social Democrats were able to gain from
the losses made by the FP. They improved their vote by 11.3 percent
and obtained a total of 38.3 percent.
The selling of the steel company Voest-Alpine, which had been
agreed to by the Austrian government a few weeks before, had a
decisive influence on the election results. Although the SPÖ
(Austrian Social Democratic Party) had only timidly criticised
the complete privatisation of the company, it was able to gain
votes among outraged workers. A statistic of the election shows
that many people who had voted for the FP previously now voted
for the Social Democrats. In the districts where many Voest workers
live, the losses of the ÖVP and FP as well as the gains made
by the SPÖ were especially high. The Greens mainly gained
votes within the suburbs of bigger towns, the so-called Speckgürteln,
where the majority of the population are in the high-income bracket.
In Tyrol, the rejection of the governments policies was
expressed in the turnout for the electionsonly 60.3 percent,
an all-time low. In 1999, 80.5 percent of those entitled to vote
had gone to the polls.
Under these conditions, the Peoples Party (ÖVP) won 49.9
percent of the vote and achieved an absolute majority of mandates
(20 of 36), but they lost votes in absolute figures. The FP also
had massive losses in Tyrol, only receiving 8 percent of the vote
(compared to 19.6 percent in 1999).
The setback for both government parties in Tyrol was beneficial
for the Social Democrats and the Greens. The SPÖ won 25.9
percent, and the Greens achieved their best ever election result
(15.5 percent). The Greens in particular were able make remarkable
gains in major cities. In Innsbruck, for instance, they obtained
26.9 percent.
Chancellor Schüssel (ÖVP) reacted with extreme agitation
to this clear rejection of his government. He stressed that regional
elections will have no influence on his policies, and that the
social attacksso-called reformswill continue
as planned.
Since the Second World War, no Austrian chancellor has confronted
such a widespread opposition as Schüssel faces today. The
overwhelming majority of the population rejects his political
course. But while the chancellor is faced with popular opposition,
he is being criticised within his own party for seeking confrontation
instead of compromise. Following the outcome of these elections
and growing governmental crisis, Schüssel is afraid that
he might not have much time left; he is therefore stepping up
the pace of his offensive against social gains. Together with
his minister of financial affairs, Heinz Grasser (independent,
former member of the FP), he is planning further cuts in pensions,
continued privatisation of public companies and a radical reorganisation
of the health services.
Widespread public opposition is also the reason why the majority
of ministers of his own party are opposing Schüssel. His
radical reform course is seen to be a danger for their secure
majorities in regional parliaments. They also criticise Grasser,
whose plans for social redistribution and tax cuts are creating
financial difficulties for regional governments. The enormous
loss of votes by the FP could lead to the collapse of the ruling
coalition.
The decline of the FP
The rapid decline of the FP has brought the party to the verge
of collapse. The FP is characterised by mass resignations and
severe internal quarrels. The weekly magazine profil has
already run the headline Life before death.
In this situation, and immediately after the elections, the
call for a strong man was loud inside the party, demanding
the return of former party leader Jörg Haider. Together with
some of the partys leading members, including Thomas Prinzhorn,
all regional leaders of the FP more or less openly demanded the
resignation of party chairman Herbert Haupt.
But at the moment, it is unclear whether Haider will answer
to the call. Although he attacked the leadership of the FP and
demanded the replacement of Haupt, his initial response has been
to appoint his own sister to a leading position in the party and
announce his readiness to lead the FP talks with the ÖVP
over planned tax reforms.
Haider made clear the extent of the problems confronting his
party when, in an interview with News, he described the
FP as bankrupt and speculated that it is best to wait
for the end and then to initiate a new beginning without any old
bias. This is the reason why he is concentrating on the
regional elections in Kärnten, which are to take place next
March.
Haider aims to lead his election campaign in opposition to
the right-wing/conservative government in Vienna and thereby against
his own party. His electoral material contains no reference to
his party, the FP or the color blue, which is associated with
the FP. The content of the FPs election campaign in Kärnten
will be a populist attack on the neo-liberal policies of Schüssel
and Grasser. If Haider wins that election, he could attempt to
reorganise the party from Kärnten.
This would not be the first time in the FPs history this
has happened. In the middle of the 1980s, before the elections
in Kärnten, Haider launched an offensive against the former
chairman of the party and vice chancellor, Norbert Steger. When
the federal government fell apart, Haider toppled Steger and took
over the chairmanship of the FP. Then he changed the party, which
had had a liberal orientation under Steger, into a staunchly right-wing
populist party that rapidly won ground in the 1990s under his
leadership.
But in contrast to the 1990s, the party has for the most part
politically worn itself out. In the past, as an opposition party
with right-wing populist slogans, it was able to channel social
discontent for its own reactionary ends. As a ruling party, this
is becoming more and more impossible. The most important function
of the FP was to shift the whole political spectrum in Austria
to the right.
Under these conditions, the recent regional elections show
a new political development. The Greens are offering their services
to Schüssel as replacement for the FP. Several commentaries
after the election spoke of a conservative-Green option.
High-ranking representatives of the ÖVP, like regional
president Josef Pühringer, regard the Greens at the moment
to be a more stable partner than the FP for the job of implementing
attacks on the social fabric. The Greens have already signalled
that they would agree to a coalition government with the conservatives.
During the coalition negotiations following the last parliamentary
elections, the Greens had already offered to take the place of
the FP. If the Greens do participate in the state government of
Upper Austria, it would strengthen the advocates of an ÖVP-Green
coalition in Vienna.
See Also:
Austria: Greens bid for coalition
with conservative ÖVP
[7 January 2003]
Huge losses for Haiders
Freedom Party in Austrian elections: An analysis of the vote
[27 November 2002]
On eve of national
elections: Austrias Social Democrats, Greens shift to the
right
[23 November 2002]
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