this post was submitted on 28 Feb 2025
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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.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

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.

[–] MithranArkanere 1 points 1 week ago

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.