Summary
Austria’s conservative ÖVP, center-left SPÖ, and liberal Neos have formed a coalition after five months of deadlock, blocking the far-right FPÖ from power despite its election victory.
Christian Stocker (ÖVP) will be chancellor, with Andreas Babler (SPÖ) as vice chancellor. The deal includes a seven-year budget plan, targeted tax relief, and social spending.
Migration policy balances security with integration, abandoning FPÖ’s hard-line stance.
The government reaffirms EU commitments, support for Ukraine, and neutrality on NATO while backing EU enlargement in the Western Balkans.
No.
Getting enough monsters and idiots vote for them is still a bad thing, but that doesn’t mean they won.
“Winning the elections” isn’t being the single force that got the most votes individually.
That’s first-past-the-post bullshit like they have in the US.
Those who win an election in a parliamentary government are those who can form a government.
I feel like there wasn’t any need for clarification, my comment already explained how they failed.
My comment wasn’t about how the current laws of Austria are but about how they ought to be in any country.
Hey my little armchair politician. Winning an election in Austria means shit all when it comes to forming a government. That is done on presidential orders.
The FPÖ nonetheless won the public vote. They are the largest faction in parliament and are very well used to being in the opposition.
You win the public vote when you get 51% of all the people who had the right to vote. That includes those who didn’t vote.
If participation is only 50% of the voters, and you get 51% of that participation, you didn’t get 51% of the votes, you got 25.5% of the votes.
And by this, I don’t mean what the current laws consider “winning the public vote” in any particular country. I mean what they need to be for that to be really true.