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Austria: Centrist Parties Confident Of Forming Coalition Government

Austria's centrist parties appear to have got their act together after extensive consultations over five months. It's the longest Austrians have had to wait for a new government.
Austria's centrist parties have said they can form a coalition government that will keep the far right out

The leaders of the three biggest centrist parties in Austria’s parliament said on
Saturday they were confident they would reach a deal to form a coalition government without the far right, almost five months after a new lower house was elected.

A deal between the conservative People’s Party (OVP), Social Democrats (SPO) and liberal Neos would bring to an end the longest wait for a new Austrian government since World War Two.

“I am very confident that in the common ground that we have found, we will manage to finalize a coalition government agreement,” conservative People’s Party leader Christian Stocker said in a statement to the media at President Alexander Van der Bellen’s office.

Stocker was speaking alongside SPO leader Andreas Babler and Neos leader Beate Meinl-Reisinger after they updated Van der Bellen on their talks together.

“I believe that Mr Stocker, Mr Babler and Mrs Meinl-Reisinger are now in the final straight in their discussions,” Van der Bellen said. None of them went into detail on their discussions or gave a time frame for reaching a deal.


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The far-right Freedom Party (FPO) won September’s parliamentary election with around 29% but was only tasked with forming a coalition government in January after a first attempt by the OVP, SPO and Neos failed. Efforts to forge that three-way tie-up were revived after the FPO’s attempt failed last week.

The lengthy wrangling that could now finally yield Austria’s first three-party government since 1949 underscores the difficulty many European countries have faced in forming stable governments while far-right parties like the eurosceptic, Russia-friendly Freedom Party (FPO) gain ground with voters.

The FPO has denounced any possible government without it as a “coalition of losers” since the three parties came second, third and fourth in September’s election.

With Reuters inputs