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The coalition talks’ collapse three months after September’s parliamentary election underscores the growing difficulty of forming stable governments in European countries.
News Service Produced externally by an organization we trust to adhere to journalistic standards.
Austrian Chancellor and Head of the Austrian People’s Party (OeVP) Karl Nehammer drinks from a glass in a TV studio in the Austrian parliament, during parliamentary elections in Vienna, Austria, 29 September 2024. [EPA-EFE/FILIP SINGER]
Talks between Austria’s two main centrist parties on forming a coalition government without the far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) collapsed on Saturday (4 January), prompting conservative Chancellor Karl Nehammer to announce he would step down.
A day earlier a third party, the liberal Neos, walked away from the talks, blaming the other parties for failing to take the bold and decisive action it said it had called for.
“I will stand down as chancellor and as leader of the People’s Party in the coming days and enable an orderly transition,” Nehammer said in a video statement on X, after talks with the Social Democrats (SPÖ).
The coalition talks’ collapse three months after September’s parliamentary election underscores the growing difficulty of forming stable governments in European countries, such as Germany and France, where the far right is on the rise but many parties are loath to partner with them.
The eurosceptic, Russia-friendly FPÖ won that election with roughly 29% of the vote. It would have needed a coalition partner to govern but Nehammer ruled out governing with FPÖ leader Herbert Kickl, meaning no potential coalition partner for the FPÖ was forthcoming.
Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen, a former leader of the Greens, therefore tasked Nehammer with forming a government. Now that Nehammer is stepping down, the two most likely options are either that Kickl is tasked with forming a government or a snap election is called.
Nehammer has described Kickl is too much of a conspiracy theorist to lead a government yet has said much of the FPÖ is trustworthy.
Kickl, however, is not an outlier within his party, which overlaps with Nehammer’s party on issues such as immigration.
The leadership of Nehammer’s People’s Party (ÖVP) was due to meet on Sunday morning to discuss who should succeed him. Whoever takes over is likely to be more open to a coalition with the FPÖ, which a large portion of the OVP favours.
The two parties governed in coalition under ÖVP leadership from 2017 until 2019, when the FPÖ’s then-leader was felled by a video-sting scandal and that coalition collapsed.
Far right rising
Support for the FPÖ has grown since the last election. It holds a lead of more than 10 points over the People’s Party (VÖP) and the SPÖ, opinion polls show.
That poses a dilemma for President Van der Bellen, who has expressed reservations about Kickl becoming chancellor.
SPÖ leader Andreas Babler confirmed at a news conference that the talks had collapsed, blaming Nehammer’s party for seeking to skimp on pensions and salaries for teachers and police officers. Nehammer blamed the SPÖ for insisting on taxing wealth and inheritance, the SPÖ’s flagship campaign policy.
“We know what threatens to happen now. An FPÖ-ÖVP government with a right-wing extremist chancellor that will endanger our democracy on many points,” Babler said.
Kickl, who has consistently railed against the coalition talks and Van der Bellen’s decision not to task him with forming a government, again likened those talks to the three-party “traffic-light coalition” in Germany which recently collapsed.
“Nehammer, Babler and Van der Bellen have also failed. They were the architects of the loser traffic light (coalition) and are now confronted with the ruins of their Kickl prevention strategy,” Kickl said in a statement.
“Alexander Van der Bellen bears a significant share of the responsibility for the chaos that has arisen and the time that has been lost … After today’s events, he is under pressure to act.”
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