Austrian centrist parties reach deal to form government without far right

Centre-right People’s Party, Social Democrats and liberal Neos publish 200-page programme aimed at reviving Austria’s economy and cutting its budget deficit

SPO leader Andreas Babler, OVP leader Christian Stocker and Neos leader Beate Meinl-Reisinger present a coalition programme in Vienna. Photograph: Alex Halada/AFP via Getty Images
SPO leader Andreas Babler, OVP leader Christian Stocker and Neos leader Beate Meinl-Reisinger present a coalition programme in Vienna. Photograph: Alex Halada/AFP via Getty Images

Five months after the far-right Freedom Party (FPO) 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 (OVP), the Social Democrats (SPO) and the liberal Neos, whose first attempt at forming a coalition failed in January, published a 200-page programme aimed mainly at reviving the country’s ailing economy and cutting its budget deficit.

Christian Stocker, the OVP leader and likely next chancellor, said on Thursday a “common programme” had been agreed with the SPO 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 FPO’s historic election victory, when it gained almost 29 per cent of the vote. After the mainstream parties’ unsuccessful effort, the OVP entered talks with the FPO, which also broke down this month.

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They would have produced Austria’s first far-right-led government since the second World War, perhaps led by the Moscow-friendly, anti-EU FPO 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 FPO’s insistence that it wanted control of both the interior and finance ministries, a demand the OVP 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.

Mr 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.

Mr Stocker took over the OVP leadership earlier this year after the former chancellor Karl Nehammer resigned when the first round of three-way coalition talks failed. Mr Stocker is a 64-year-old lawyer who spent three decades in local politics and became an MP in 2019.

Austria goes back to the drawing board after far right fails to form governmentOpens in new window ]

The coalition deal calls for strict new asylum rules, “return centres” to house rejected asylum seekers and the suspension of family reunification. Mr 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 OVP and SPO 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 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 OVP down to 19 per cent from the 26 per cent it scored in September.

The FPO, which has gained popularity since the election and is now polling at nearly 35 per cent, would be likely to win a new vote even more comfortably. Mr Kickl has dismissed the new government as a “coalition of losers” and called for a snap ballot. – Guardian

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