• 3 months ago

Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com

Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.English

Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en
Transcript
00:00This is, on one hand, part of a new story that's happening across Europe with far-right
00:05parties coming first in elections from Italy to the Netherlands to France's European election
00:11in June.
00:12But on the other hand, this is also part of a very old Austrian story.
00:16This party, FPĂ–, has been a huge force in Austrian politics since the Second World War.
00:22Austria did not have the same kind of denazification process that Germany had.
00:27And this party's origins go back to people who were Nazis during World War II, who actually
00:33even immediately after the war got 11 percent in the election.
00:36And this result that they've gotten is actually fairly similar to results they've gotten several
00:41times over the past decades.
00:43For instance, in 1999, they came second with 27 percent.
00:47And then again in 2017, they got 26 percent.
00:51The big difference, of course, here is that they've come first.
00:54That's never happened before.
00:56They've surpassed the center-right OVP.
00:58And that, in theory, gives them the prerogative to form a government.
01:02So there's two possibilities here.
01:04Austria could go the Italian route.
01:06In Italy, the far-right leader, Giorgio Maloney, was made prime minister.
01:10Or they could go the Dutch route, where far-right leader Geert Wilders, the center-right said
01:15he was too toxic.
01:16There was no way they could form a government where he was prime minister.
01:19So instead, they brought in a kind of neutral technocrat to serve in that government as
01:25the figurehead leader.
01:26But of course, Geert Wilders' People for Freedom Party still remains the majority partner
01:31in that coalition.
01:32Now, the center-right OVP has said they can't work with Herbert Kickl because he's too controversial.
01:38He said things that are too controversial.
01:40They could not form a government with him as prime minister.
01:43However, they've said they're open to forming a government with FPĂ– as they have in the
01:47past.
01:48And that's important.
01:49This far-right party has been part of Austrian governments in the past.
01:53The difference this time, though, would be they would be the majority partner and not
01:58the minority partner as they have before.

Recommended