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VIENNA ELECTIONS

POLITICS

Could far-right leader conquer ‘red’ Vienna?

Boosted by a surge in popularity in the wake of Europe's refugee crisis, the leader of Austria's far-right Freedom Party, Heinz-Christian Strache, hopes to finally break the Socialists' 70-year reign in Vienna in Sunday's regional election.

Could far-right leader conquer 'red' Vienna?
Heinz-Christian Strache. Photo: FPÖ

“Let's roll up our sleeves and do this, out of love for our home town, out of love for the people of this city! We will succeed, I can feel it,” he told a large rally in front of St Stephen's Cathedral on Thursday, calling the ballot a “historic chance”.

Among those applauding the rousing speech was Claudia, an unemployed accounting secretary who said she hadn't been able to find “a real job” for the past four years.

“This time we stand a chance of being heard. People realise that the real defender of workers' rights is him,” she said.

A decade after the tall, blue-eyed Strache took the reins of the FPÖ, his dreams of glory no longer seem far-fetched.

Latest polls show his party has drawn nearly level with the centre-left Social Democrats (SPÖ), who have governed the Austrian capital since the end of World War II.

Häupl has been in power for 21 years. Photo: ORF/Roland Winkler

At the last city election five years ago, the Socialists took 44.3 percent of the vote, with the FPÖ lagging more than 18 points behind.

Now 46-year-old Strache narrowly trails Vienna's Socialist mayor Michael Häupl, who has been in power for 21 years, by only a point in the polls.

“The gap between the two parties is narrowing all the quicker as the projected seven-point gain for the FPÖ coincides with a comparable erosion for the (Socialists of the) SPÖ,” political analyst Marcelo Jenny told AFP.

Latent xenophobia

But — and it's an important but — even if Strache wins Sunday's vote, it is doubtful that he will be mayor since the Socialists are likely to form a coalition.

Nevertheless, the victory would represent a symbolic political earthquake in the left-wing capital nicknamed “Vienna the red”, and one even Strache's charismatic predecessor, the late Jörg Haider, had been unable to achieve.

“I think it has become apparent for all that we can, for the first time in 70 years, become the first political force,” Strache proclaimed in a recent interview, flashing his boyish grin.

A dental technician who specialises in making false teeth, he has been moulding the party to his will ever since he replaced Haider in 2005.

A former member of a radical student fraternity, Strache had not been impressed with the more moderate stance the FPÖ had adopted under Haider, following its entry into a coalition with the conservative ÖVP in 2000.

At first, Strache stoked the more extremist elements of his party and re-introduced openly racist slogans. But when the approach didn't translate into votes, “he realised his pan-Germanic themes” weren't widening the party's appeal, political analyst Anton Pelinka told AFP.

“So he shifted his political discourse towards issues seeking to reassure the lower classes and directly reaching out to Socialist voters. The xenophobic root was still there, but in a more latent form.”

'October revolution'

Taking a leaf from the success of Marine Le Pen's makeover of the far-right National Front in France, Strache toned down his rhetoric and increasingly focused on social welfare and purchasing power as the economic crisis hit.

At the same, the FPÖ also began distancing itself from neo-Nazi, racist and anti-Semitic comments of some of its most prominent members. Last year, Andreas Mölzer, the party's leading candidate in the European elections, was forced to quit after declaring that the EU was in danger of becoming a “conglomerate of niggers”.

Party posters openly vilifying Islam have disappeared from Vienna's streets. Instead, Strache now hails an “October revolution”, in a reference to the Russian Bolshevik uprising of 1917.

In the wake of the refugee crisis, which has seen more than 200,000 people pass through Austria in September, the party leader has chosen his words carefully, underlining that “asylum is a right” but not for “economic migrants”.

“He has understood that it's useless to go too hard on the topic, which has played in his favour so far,” observed Pelinka.

The FPÖ's tactics already paid off in another local election in Upper Austria last month when the party finished second, while the SPÖ and ÖVP of the ruling national coalition suffered disastrous losses.

Sunday's vote will show whether voters in Vienna will also vent their anger with the government by voting for Strache.

For members

POLITICS

Why does Austria rank so badly for press freedom?

Between political scandals and a decreasing media market, Austria has consistently ranked low in analyses of worldwide press freedom, but it has reached its lowest point this year.

Why does Austria rank so badly for press freedom?

When we think about countries where there are issues with press freedom, it’s usually the places that are war zones or dictatorships that come to mind. So the fact that Austria ranks only 32nd in the latest Reporters Without Borders (RSF) press freedom index may seem surprising to many people.

This is the country’s worst result to date, as it slipped from the 29th position it held last year. In 2024, Austria ranks in the middle of the countries classified as “satisfactory,” behind Moldova and ahead of Mauritania. Only eight countries are rated as having a “good” situation. The 22nd edition of the Press Freedom Index covers 180 countries worldwide.

According to Fritz Hausjell, President of RSF Austria, there are many reasons why Austria has fallen behind. The judiciary is investigating “highly problematic close relationships and suspected corrupt practices between the governing party ÖVP and several major media outlets”, he said, according to an ORF report. In addition, the judiciary is investigating the far-right FPÖ’s role in possible advertising corruption.

“In Austria, press freedom has been undermined by various political pressures or restrictions on access to information. Violence at public events prevented journalists from reporting freely”, RSF said.

READ ALSO: How Austria has tightened laws to prevent political corruption

Small market and political influences

“With just a dozen major outlets, the media market is small and very concentrated”, according to the RSF report. Additionally, tabloids have the largest readership, and there have been many attempts to influence both state and privately-owned media, with RSF calling the practice “constant”.

“Some politicians are suspected of having used public funds to buy favourable coverage in the tabloid media, while others have tried to intervene by directly going to editorial offices, such as former Chancellor Sebastian Kurz. He was forced to resign in 2021 due to suspicions of buying positive coverage in a privately owned newspaper. Journalists are sometimes the targets of political attacks coming from the extremes”, the report stated.

There have been significant scandals after corruption allegations between politicians and the media.

Most recently, prosecutors said an investigation into several former government members for alleged bribery, corruption, and breach of trust was opened in mid-April. Herbert Kickl, the hardline leader of Austria’s right-wing Freedom Party (FPOe)—currently leading polls ahead of elections expected in September—is suspected of commissioning adverts and paying for them with public money.

READ ALSO: The Kurz corruption scandal exposes Austria’s press freedom problems

In late 2021, a major media graft scandal erupted in the Alpine country. Austria’s former Chancellor Sebastian Kurz and his inner circle were accused of using public funds to pay for polls skewed to boost his image on Austrian tabloid media. It eventually led to Kurz’s resignation and exit from politics.

Of course, one of the country’s most infamous political scandals, the so-called Ibizagate that blew up in 2019, also shows Austrian leaders’ and major media’s murky underground connections. At the time, a leaked video showed then FPÖ leader and vice-chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache in a 2017 meeting on the Spanish resort island of Ibiza with a woman posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch.

Among the many controversial statements, Strache was filmed discussing the possibility of the woman buying Austria’s most-read tabloid, Kronen Zeitung, and making its editorial line more pro-FPOe.

READ MORE: ‘Ibizagate’ – What you need to know about the Austrian political corruption scandal

But it’s not just the tabloid media that has shrouded connections to those in power. In 2022, two prominent Austrian journalists, editors of reputed media such as Die Presse and ORF, had to resign over leaked chats between them and politicians. The chats showed discussions over appointments with the public broadcaster ORF and friendly notes with “inappropriate closeness” between them and political leaders.

Outdated legal framework and harassment

Although various bills are being discussed, Austria is the last EU member state without a freedom of information law. Journalists are, moreover, concerned about certain political parties’ attempts to restrict their access to judicial information. 

Journalists are also harassed by various interest groups and societal movements. They are liable to censor themselves as a result of online attacks based on their gender, social class, ethnicity or religion. 

After the COVID-19 pandemic, the war between Russia and Ukraine has become an issue that is polarising Austrian society and encouraging people to question journalism, the report highlighted.

READ ALSO: ‘Reforms needed urgently’ – Is Austria becoming more corrupt?

Additionally, reporters’ coverage of protests is facing significant obstruction by police, who use frequent identity checks to harass them and threaten legal action. Women journalists are particularly at risk. Newsrooms often receive threatening letters and messages, according to the report.

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