RCNetwork Header
SUBSCRIBE TODAY TO CONNECT WITH AFFILIATES FROM AROUND THE WORLD :: SIGN UP HERE >>

AUSTRIA @ RCN
RCN COUNTRIES
USA
.Sent Mail
Afghanistan
Africa Union
Albania
Algeria
Angola
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Baltic Nations
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Benin
Bolivia
Bosnia
Botswana
Brazil
Brunei
Bulgaria
Burkina
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Chad
Chile
China
Colombia
Congo
Costa Rica
Croatia
Cuba
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Eritrea
Estonia
Ethiopia
European Union
Fiji
Finland
France
Gambia
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Grenada
Guam
Guatemala
Guyana
Haiti
Holland
Honduras
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Ivory Coast
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhastan
Kenya
Kosovo
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Laos
Lebanon
Liberia
Libya
Luxembourg
Macedonia
Madagascar
Malaysia
Mali
Marshall Islands
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mexico
Micronesia
Monaco
Mongolia
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
NATO
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
North Korea
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Panama
Paraguay
Peru
Phillipines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Romania
Russia
Rwanda
Samoa
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
Somalia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Swaziland
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Thailand
Togo
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United Nations
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
Vatican City
Venezuela
Vietnam
Western Sahara
Yemen
Zaire
Zambia
Zimbabwe

Syndicated News from Austria

Austrians concerned about EU unemployment

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 13:55:34 GMT

Austrians concerned about EU unemployment
Austrian Independent
Karmasin asked 500 Austrians to reveal which developments they were concerned about. Around 43 per cent identified unemployment. This means that Austrians fear negative trends in this regard more than anything else when it comes to European ...

BZÖ ends Stronach speculations

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 13:51:28 GMT

BZÖ ends Stronach speculations
Austrian Independent
The Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZÖ) has finally dismissed the circulating rumours about teaming up with a billionaire businessman. The party, which sensationally won almost 11 per cent in the national election of 2008, could drop out of ...

Schönborn warns disobedient priests

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 13:38:03 GMT

Schönborn warns disobedient priests
Austrian Independent
Schönborn, the highest representative of the Austrian Catholic Church, told Italian newspaper La Stampa yesterday (Thurs): "Now is the time to clarify the various issues. We might take disciplinary measures, but I hope that this is not necessary.

Incoming IHS boss says pension age must rise

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 13:55:33 GMT

Incoming IHS boss says pension age must rise
Austrian Independent
Christian Keuschnigg, who is set to succeed Bernhard Felderer as head of the renowned research group next month, said such a measure would not cause an unacceptable amount of pressure on the Austrian social systems. Keuschnigg claimed the various ...

Nazi officer to remain at the Vienna Central Cemetery

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 13:01:31 GMT

Nazi officer to remain at the Vienna Central Cemetery
Austrian Independent
After numerous desecrations, the grave of Nazi fighter pilot Nowotny was being considered for a move by the Austrian Home Office. Instead of deciding to move the grave they have now decided to provide new management for it instead.

and more »

Mikl-Leitner fends off Prammer attack

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 13:51:28 GMT

Mikl-Leitner fends off Prammer attack
Austrian Independent
He claimed such a reform could improve the reputation of Austria's politicians. Prammer said she was not in favour of the idea since it was possible that social spending decreased as a consequence. Werner Kogler of the Green Party criticised Kurz over ...

and more »

Nazi still honoured in Austria

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 12:34:41 GMT

Nazi still honoured in Austria
Austrian Times
Former SS Nazi Josef Vallaster involved in thousands of murders in Nazi concentration camps is still honoured in a book of remembrance which is located in the crypt at Heldenplatz in the Austrian capital of Vienna. The Austrian Green Party criticised ...

and more »

Rising rents fuel inflation

Date Added: Thu, 17 May 2012 14:00:21 GMT

Rising rents fuel inflation
Austrian Independent
Statistik Austria said yesterday (Weds) the inflation rose by 2.3 per cent, meaning that the average price of predicts and services on offer in Austria climbed to this extent from April 2011 to the same month of this year. This is the lowest rise since ...
Kurz kicks off kindergarten initiativeAustrian Times

all 3 news articles »

Thieves caught trying to nick F**king Sign

Date Added: Fri, 18 May 2012 12:39:56 GMT

Thieves caught trying to nick F**king Sign
Austrian Independent
Thieves trying to steal the village sign to F***ing in Austria have been nicked after police caught them in the act of trying to pull it down. Residents were forced to keep their rude name after trying to change it to Fugging, only to find another town ...

and more »

BZÖ farewell possible, poll shows

Date Added: Thu, 17 May 2012 14:01:31 GMT

BZÖ farewell possible, poll shows
Austrian Independent
The chances of the Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZÖ) to avoid dropping out of parliament are waning, according to a new poll. Viennese research group Karmasin found that just two per cent of voters would currently support the party ? which was ...

Warning: mysql_result() expects parameter 2 to be long, string given in /var/www/vhosts/rcnetwork.net/httpdocs/Country.php on line 19
Results 1 - 10 of Headlines for Austria

Austria Headlines

Results Page:

COALITION DISINTEGRATION MAY PUT HAIDER BACK IN FRONT

Date Added: Sunday, September 8th, 2002
Contributed by: RCN Administrator
Three members of Austria’s far-right Freedom Party -- Vice President Susanne Riess-Passer, Finance Minister Karl-Heinz Grasser and Transport Minister Mathias Reichhold -- resigned Sept. 8 and 9 due to a tax cut dispute with party founder Joerg Haider. The party’s parliamentary speaker joined these members in resigning from his post as well, and the split caused conservative Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel to call for early elections.

The four officials comprised the most PR-friendly batch of leaders the Freedom Party could muster, as Haider -- who has caused controversy with his sympathetic remarks about the Third Reich -- had been forced to give up his chairmanship in order for the party to be admitted into the government coalition. But he has remained its dominant personality since the party’s foundation in the 1970s.

As representatives of the junior partner in Austria’s governing coalition, the Freedom Party’s ministers have been unable to dictate the direction of government policy. And Haider has progressively upped his criticism of them in recent months, as well as formed a wedge between himself and the ministers by discussing party strategy and policy with others -- including Schuessel -- without notifying Riess-Passer.

The break became a full breach last week when the ministers insisted that the emergency costs of dealing with last month’s catastrophic floods throughout Europe would necessitate delaying promised tax cuts. Haider, who led the successful October 1999 election campaign that saw the Freedom Party garner 27 percent of the vote, disagreed.

The back-and-forth tussling between Riess-Passer, the former official chair of the Freedom Party, and Haider, the de facto head, ended with Riess-Passer’s resignation. Schuessel, long fed up with the Freedom Party’s unpredictability, promptly announced he would recommend his own party withdraw from the governing coalition.

The likely snap elections that could take place in November set the stage for an electoral showdown between the disorganized Freedom Party, Schuessel’s center-right People’s Party and the opposition Greens and Social Democrats. A recent Gallup poll gave the Social Democrats 37 percent of voter support, followed by the People’s Party with 29 percent, the Freedom Party with 20 percent and the Greens with 12 percent.

Before the Freedom Party gained a seat at the government table, a coalition between the Social Democrats and the People’s Party ruled Austria for most of the post-WWII period. A re-occurrence of such a development, or a Social Democrats/Green coalition, is the likely outcome of the snap elections.

Although Haider is a shoo-in to be re-elected as chairman at the Freedom Party’s Oct. 20 convention, since there are no credible alternatives, the loss of four leaders will make it very difficult for him to pull his party back together in time to make a strong showing.

That is very good news for the rest of Europe. Whoever wins the next round of elections will be the voice for Austria as the European Union accepts 10 new states in 2004. A Chancellor Haider would almost assuredly veto the expansion on principle. The other three parties support the expansion, albeit with qualifications.

In the mid-term, the Freedom Party will continue to follow the path of other nationalist movements in Western democracies. Like New Zealand First, Australia’s One Nation and France’s National Front, the Freedom Party has had its moment in the sun, but it has failed to directly shape policies at the national level. Of the other three, only New Zealand First holds any seats in the national parliament.

But the likely evisceration of the Freedom Party’s official representation in the parliament in November does not mean nationalist issues have disappeared from Austria’s political dialogue. Haider needs time to regroup, and his political history clearly shows that his party will be back in the spotlight in the future.

The only way his political opponents could truly weaken him permanently would be to co-opt his followers. But while French President Jacques Chirac and Australian Prime Minister John Howard have proven quite slick in their adoption of nationalist rhetoric (and policy) to absorb the far right into their own more mainstream parties, that appears less likely in Austria.

Only the center-right People’s Party could have a chance at making inroads in the right-wing community, but its past failure to do just that allowed the Freedom Party to get into power in the first place.

Haider may be down, but he most certainly will be back. And with the more moderate elements of his party now on the outs, the Freedom Party’s loudest and proudest days may be yet to come.
The Renaissance Connection Network :: © 2001 - 2012
Contact Us :: Press Releases :: Conditions of Use :: Privacy Policy
Involvement Information :: Subscriber Level :: Member Level :: Rep Level :: Affiliate Level

LOGIN TO RCNETWORK.NET
E-mail Address:

Password:

Web Development & Hosting by ANTIOCH MEDIA GROUP