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    1. | Party | % | Change vs 2024 | EP Group |
      |——|—-|—————-|———|
      | FPÖ | 35.7 | +6.9 | PfE (Patriots for Europe) |
      | ÖVP | 21.9 | -4.4 | EPP (European People’s Party) |
      | SPÖ | 17.8 | -3.3 | S&D (Progressive Alliance of Socialists & Democrats) |
      | Grüne | 10.3 | +2.1 | Greens/EFA |
      | NEOS | 8.5 | -0.6 | Renew Europe |

    2. Strict_Geologist_385 on

      FPÖ (far right party) is not a part of government at the moment and the next (regularly scheduled) legislative election will take place in 2029, why is this relevant now?
      Governing parties tend to lose support in times of stagnating economic growth and fiscal stress (inherited from previous government) but there‘s still time to turn things around.

    3. ThisTheRealLife on

      For context, there are a lot of justified frustrations in Austria.
      A stagnating economy, inflation coming down only slowly, a debt crisis leading to austerity, overwhelmed healthcare system, overwhelmed schools and childcare, and both high unemployment yet lack of qualified people.
      The right wing is the party for frustrated people.
      They promise to solve the issue of pensions (20bn missing in the system) by cutting funds for asylum seekers (200mn)
      They promise to lower energy prices by importing cheap Russian gas (which in Hungary still costs more than the evil gulf/US gas costs in Austria)
      They promise to end political corruption (while most of their candidates are currently investigated for corruption)

    4. Jesus, what’s wrong with people. FPÖ is a founding member of the Patriots.eu.

    5. Crafty_Aspect8122 on

      People never learn. The austrian painter wasn’t enough.

      „Hey we’re having corruption and economic issues. Let’s vote in a corrupt dictator who wants to opress us.“

    6. Is FPÖ the Hitler party? Called something like Faterland Partei Österreich?

    7. BratlConnoisseur on

      Next elections are in 2029 so this is thankfully not entirely relevant since a lot of things can change until then. For example in 2016 the FPÖ was already polling around 35%, which is the same level as now but in the elections of 2017 they came in third at 26%.

      There is a slight upward trend for our Christian Democrats atm, going from 19% to 22-23% in recent polls, while the Social Democrats seem to be stuck at 18-19%.

    8. thatMrGecko on

      does this mean fpö can rule alone? or could övp & spö just freeze them out?

    9. I am ashamed and appalled to be a citizen of this country sometimes. I cannot explain this voting behavior other than with a good chunk of the population being complete, reactionary, goldfish-brained, racist and self-hating imbeciles. In fact, for someone who‘s just a racist and raging Nazi, voting for FPÖ wouldn‘t make logical sense. FPÖ is pure idiocy and corruption. That‘s it. They showed it time and again.

    10. People who say that the next federal election is only in 2029 miss an important point: the state elections that will take place before then are just as significant. The Austrian states are, in terms of authority, quite powerful and can strongly shape how federal law is applied. In some cases, they may even interpret or implement federal rules differently—for example, the handling of certain COVID-19 measures in Vienna.

    11. I really can’t decide who learn less from past mistakes. Hungarians, Germans or Austrians….

    12. Austrians never learn. They already put the FPÖ in power two times in the 21st century, and both times were a disaster.

    13. chiffongalore on

      🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠

    14. Reform UK in Britain, La Pen’s party in France, AfF in Germany, FPÖ in Austria… ugh, this is so depressing.

    15. I’d be very interested to know how these figures were calculated. This map shows cities that have been red for decades as blue. I know Austria is politically conservative, but this can’t be right.

    16. dudthyawesome on

      Any time anything happens in Europe, there’s a right-wing party promising they will fix everything in no time, although they do absolutely nothing but complain. After they win, they blame the „evil shadow government controlled by (insert anything here)“ that does not let them fix anything, so they just continue complaining and blaming.

    17. Explorer_1990_ on

      Like in Hungary at 2010 the districts were all orange, which is color of Fidesz and Orban.

      If now TISZA will win and Orban defeat, that would be a massive twist of fate.

      I am just saying to my Austrian fellows:

      – Far-right, iliberal never solved the economy issues

      – They always find the good excuse to blaiming always someone else.

      – Vaist majority of people can be easily manipulated if you play with their fears. Most of them not even aware of their own interest

      – Some disappointed person will be shocked if they get for what he/she actually voted for.

    18. Galacticmetrics on

      Very much similar polls to the UK with the Rural/Urban divide. Rural areas are over polling well for Reform

    19. Toiletten-Toni on

      Just for German clarification…

      FPÖ = AfD

      SPÖ = SPD

      ÖVP = CDU

      ?

    20. Sound0fSilence on

      Source: „based on Austrian polling averages“. Would have been nice to include links or names to said polling institutes…? Obviously FPÖ will have strong projections in times of crisis in the middle of a legislature period, but especially for some districts in Vienna I would have loved to be able to fact check these alleged pollings.

    21. Unknown_Lifeform1104 on

      It’s so cool to have a country shaped like a KFC chicken drumstick <3

    22. Fun fact: Austria (Eastern realm) just means eastern Bavaria.

      I really don’t know why they hey haven’t changed their name in the last centuries.

    23. Wellington1821 on

      How come the ÖVP is leading in that one district in Tyrol?

      I always heard that that place was as right-wing as it gets in Austria?

    24. CornBread_God on

      I wouldnt say im surprised by this but itll be great to have another reason to dislike Austrians

    25. bloke_pusher on

      I don’t like right wing parties nor will vote for them. I accept them to be there and them being voted in. I’d be even okay to endure them as it’s the wish of the majority, but I don’t like the part they have all in common, about trying to destroy the EU. It’s such an important solidarity and law union, that whoever breaks off from it, will guarantee to drown internationally and take every remaining member with them. We can reverse bad laws and even undo departing foreigners in a few years, we can endure bad member states to some degree, but when the EU breaks, we’re stuck with this for our lifetime. It would mean decades over decades of misery and I wish people would realize this danger. Without the EU, as much critics they deserve, we’re nothing but individual nutshell floating in the ocean, victims of the currents. In those international markets, a single country alone can’t survive. It will simply get crushed.

    26. Yeah, i am a lifelong SPÖ voter now switching over to the FPÖ thanks to being beaten up in the street together with my wife by Muslim Immigrants.

      Will they solve our problems? No, absolutely not, but at least they will make life more difficult for these mfs.

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