Disgruntled over immigration, ailing economy, Austrians handed victory to far-right party

Despite its winning 29% of vote, rivals refuse to enter coalition with Freedom Party, with a video surfacing on voting day of members at recent funeral where Nazi SS song was sung

Herbert Kickl (C), leader and top candidate of right-wing populist Freedom Party of Austria (FPOe) is celebrated by supporters at the party's election event after exit poll numbers were announced at the Stiegl-Ambulanz restaurant in Vienna, Austria on September 29, 2024. (Alex Halada/AFP)
Herbert Kickl (C), leader and top candidate of right-wing populist Freedom Party of Austria (FPOe) is celebrated by supporters at the party's election event after exit poll numbers were announced at the Stiegl-Ambulanz restaurant in Vienna, Austria on September 29, 2024. (Alex Halada/AFP)

VIENNA, Austria (Reuters) — Luca Pirveli grew up in Austria as the son of Georgian refugees, but the 19-year-old believes immigration is out of control and should be curbed. He is one of many young working-age voters who helped propel Austria’s far-right to its first election victory.

Many were voicing their belief not just that Austria has in the past few years taken in immigrants from outside Europe faster than it can integrate them but also concerns about economic stagnation and the spiraling cost of living.

Sunday’s election, which gave the Freedom Party (FPOe) led by the Russia-friendly, eurosceptic Herbert Kickl 29 percent of the vote, its best-ever showing, delivered a clear message, said Pirveli, a university student in Vienna.

“This result means change for Austria, change in immigration policy, change in economic policy,” he said, adding that he expected “asylum seekers who come and commit crimes” would henceforth be deported.

Pirveli’s belief in the FPOe reflects the growing popularity in the European Union of hard-right parties that have embraced social media like TikTok to attract younger people worried about the impact of inflation, job security, and the Ukraine war.

FPOe supporters are more likely to be edgy about terrorism and immigration, and also the least likely to agree that democracy is the most effective form of government, according to a survey of 1,248 voters over the past week by polling firms Foresight and ISA.

Voters arrive at a polling station in Vienna on September 29, 2024, during Austria’s general election. (Joe Klamar/AFP)

“It’s always been the case that the Freedom Party benefits when the country is very dissatisfied,” said Peter Hajek of polling firm Peter Hajek Public Opinion Strategies.

The FPOe, whose total vote jumped from the last election in 2019 by about 630,000 to over 1.4 million, remains well short of a majority in parliament. To govern, it will need a partner.

Despite the FPOe’s efforts to moderate its image, the party — originally led in the 1950s by an ex-Nazi SS officer — remains anathema to most of the political spectrum. After Sunday’s vote, its rivals quickly refused to enter into a coalition with the firebrand Kickl.

Even as voting took place on Sunday, controversy resurfaced about the FPOe’s past when a video published by the newspaper Der Standard showed members of the party attending a recent funeral where a song once popular with the SS was sung.

But other parties should be wary of trying to keep the FPOe out of government, said Josef Binder, a 57-year-old carpenter and FPOe voter. “Ignoring 29% of the voters is not on,” he said.

In an apparent nod to such sentiment, Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer, leader of the governing conservatives, urged Austria’s president on Tuesday to give the FPOe the first crack at forming a new coalition, saying this would uphold democratic tradition.

Anti-establishment sentiment

So strong is the discontent with the Alpine republic’s established parties that even some longtime opponents say the FPOe has taken the correct approach to some issues.

“Before, I’d have said [an FPOe victory] is definitely bad,” said Christina Sieber, a disenchanted longtime Greens voter.

A demonstrator holds up a placard that reads ‘Austria’s Lockdown Chancellor’ as he takes part in a rally held by Austria’s far-right Freedom Party FPOe against the measures taken to curb the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, at Maria Theresien Platz square in Vienna, Austria on November 20, 2021. (Joe Klamar / AFP)

While she still considers the FPOe “too dangerous” to vote for, she described her opposition to it as more nuanced now. The party, she said, had been right to oppose Austria’s strict lockdown and mandatory inoculations during the COVID pandemic.

Lingering resentment over the lockdown carried over into the election, and the FPOe has been particularly effective in getting its message out on social media, said Hajek.

With 216,000 subscribers on its official YouTube channel, the FPOe eclipses the 1,500 of the long-governing conservative People’s Party (OVP). The FPOe also has many more followers on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok.

The Foresight survey showed 27% of young voters opting for the FPOe, compared with 20% for the OVP and up from 20% in the previous election in 2019.

Among middle-aged voters, the FPOe captured 37%, almost double that of the OVP and over double the 16% taken by the far right at the polls five years ago.

Rising discontent over Austria’s stagnating economy and immigration has broadened the FPOe’s appeal, said Hajek. Some 57% of voters said Austria had been on the wrong track over the last five years, up from 32% in 2019, the Foresight study found.

Pirveli, the university student, said things would have to change even if the FPOe were excluded from the next government. “If the parties just carry on as before then the result will be even clearer at the next election.”

Engineer Josef Gradl, 55, a Green voter, said he feared an FPOe-led government would exploit widespread pessimism. “They’ll look for flimsy excuses to blame everything that isn’t going well on foreigners. Easy solutions, easy principle: populism.”

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