Austria’s far-right Freedom Occasion of Austria (FPO) seems set to win the favored vote on Sunday in what could be a historic first.
The FPO has been outpolling the governing centre-right Austrian Folks’s Occasion (OVP) and the Social Democratic Occasion of Austria (SPO) for the previous yr, partly pushed by opposition to immigration.
“Anti-migration sentiment is now rising, empowered by the newest East German elections and success of the Various for Deutschland (AfD),” College of Helsinki lecturer in Japanese European research Katalin Miklossy informed Al Jazeera.
Germany’s far-right AfD turned the primary social gathering in that nation to win a state election three weeks in the past, coming forward of mainstream events in Thuringia. It additionally carried out nicely in Saxony.
“The German chancellor promised in desperation to shut borders and ship again unlawful immigrants,” mentioned Miklossy.
Now the Austrian far proper appears set for an additional breakthrough.
The FPO’s marketing campaign worries sceptics. FPO chief Herbert Kickl calls himself Volkskanzler, a “folks’s chancellor”, the title utilized by Adolph Hitler within the Thirties. He helps a constitutional modification recognising two sexes, successfully outlawing non-binary genders, a place advocated by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s United Russia Occasion. The FPO manifesto recommends “de-migration of uninvited foreigners” and a return to higher racial homogeny.
What’s the FPO’s place on immigration?
The FPO helps deporting migrants who break the legislation, chopping down on – or banning – asylum approvals and admitting fewer migrants into the economic system. It desires to restrict social advantages to native Austrians.
One concern is that along with different European Union members against immigration, it may push for main modifications to the Asylum and Migration Pact, agreed final Could after 5 years of negotiation.
The pact’s essential innovation is that it obliges central European states to tackle a few of the burden of processing asylum seekers with front-line states like Greece and Italy.
Angeliki Dimitriadi, lead migration researcher on the Hellenic Basis for European and Overseas Coverage (ELIAMEP), an Athens-based suppose tank, believes a revision is unlikely.
“There was already dissatisfaction amongst many MEPs within the European Parliament with the pact and a need to hunt to renegotiate particular elements, particularly to harden coverage on returns, instantly after it was agreed,” she informed Al Jazeera.
“It’s not solely the Austrians however others who’ve expressed a need to reopen sure chapters. However maybe that is wishful pondering. The Fee has made it clear that it desires to proceed to implementation.”
Austria has lengthy been conservative on migration.
In September 2015, after German Chancellor Angela Merkel mentioned she would admit 800,000 asylum seekers, Balkan international locations opened their borders to a stream of refugees who walked from Greece to the Austrian and German borders. Many Europeans feared a repeat efficiency within the spring.
In February 2016, Austria created a separate refugee monitoring system with the police chiefs of the previous Yugoslavia, prevailing on North Macedonia to place up barbed wire alongside its border with Greece. This successfully closed the Balkan route, bottling up arrivals in Greece.
When the European Fee created a relocation programme in September 2015, asking member states to voluntarily tackle asylum instances from Greece and Italy, Austria was considered one of six EU international locations that refused.
But Austria has voted for the present pact which makes solidarity compulsory.
What’s the FPO’s stance on the conflict in Ukraine?
Austria’s Russophilic tendencies throughout the Ukraine conflict are maybe of even higher concern to the EU.
Kickl is crucial of the cash spent on defending Ukraine. So is the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders, Slovakia’s Robert Fico and Hungary’s Viktor Orban. Austria and Hungary are the one EU and NATO members to not have despatched weapons to Ukraine besides via multilateral support.
“They’re already working collectively,” mentioned Miklossy. “The [expected] end result is accelerating the strain on Ukraine for peace talks.”
Austria’s neutrality in direction of Russia has deep roots.
“Austria is a really particular case due to … its particular standing throughout the Chilly Warfare period,” when it sat alongside the Iron Curtain, Jakub Landovsky, director of the Aspen Institute Central Europe informed Al Jazeera. “There was a powerful feeling that Russia will be reasoned with, that Russia is an effective commerce associate, which isn’t precisely the case.”
“The Russian need throughout the Chilly Warfare period was to have this nation neutralised like Finland,” he mentioned.
Russia neutralised Austria partly by subsidising it with low cost vitality. “From the Sixties onwards, Austria was capable of import fuel and oil cheaply and reliably from Russia through Ukraine,” wrote Tessa Szyszkowitz, a distinguished fellow on the Royal United Providers Institute (RUSI).
Austria’s impartial stance additionally lowered its defence prices. After 1970, it by no means spent greater than 1.5 % of its economic system on the armed forces, based on figures from the Stockholm Worldwide Peace Analysis Institute (SIPRI).
“Neutrality has confirmed so well-liked as a result of it has allowed Austria to speculate extra in social companies, healthcare and training over the many years,” wrote Szyszkowitz.

Has the FPO loved well-liked assist previously?
1 / 4 of a century in the past, underneath Jorg Haider, the FPO positioned second within the 1999 normal election and entered a coalition with the OVP, which had positioned third.
It was the primary entry of a far-right social gathering in authorities because the second world conflict and it shocked Europe.
However the FPO fell from grace in 2018 after its chief was caught on video attempting to change political favours with what he believed to be a Russian oligarch’s niece.
The affair turned often known as the Ibiza scandal, after the Spanish island the place the video was filmed.
“It appears as if the scandals, just like the Ibiza scandal, haven’t made an influence within the credibility of this social gathering,” mentioned Landovsky.
The present authorities underneath Chancellor Karl Nehammer has tried to drift the concept neutrality in direction of Russia now not pays, and safety should come first – if crucial, on the expense of the economic system.
“The large query is whether or not the overall populace feels the identical means and accepts the present laborious financial actuality,” mentioned Landovsky, “or in the event that they wish to proceed with this appeasement dialogue coverage, which I believe could be very ineffective in coping with Russian aggression.”
Will the FPO govern?
The FPO isn’t anticipated to win sufficient votes for single-party rule, that means it’s going to more than likely should kind a coalition to control. That might imply forming a consensus on sensitive points like migration and overseas coverage.
Nehammer, chief of the OVP, has dominated out working with Kickl, however hasn’t dominated out working with the FPO. It is usually conceivable that the SPO and OVP would kind a coalition to maintain the FPO out of presidency.
Austria’s President Alexander Van Der Bellen, a former spokesman for the Inexperienced Occasion, can also be a strong gatekeeper. He must approve cupboard appointments, filtering out extremists, and has the facility to dismiss the cupboard.