Austria’s ousted leader vows to win his job back after no-confidence vote
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz was ousted by parliament in a no-confidence vote Monday.
A new election is already planned for September and President Alexander Van der Bellen needs to appoint a caretaker government to serve until then.
But 32-year-old Kurz, who became Europe’s youngest leader when he was sworn into office in 2017, has vowed that he and his center-right People’s Party would return to power with increased strength.
The result makes Kurz the shortest-serving chancellor since 1945 with 525 days in office, according to the Austria Press Agency.
VIENNA (AP) — Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz was ousted by parliament in a no-confidence vote Monday, paving the way for a new election. The young leader, riding high in popular support, defiantly vowed that he and his center-right People’s Party would return to power with increased strength.
The vote capped a week of turmoil at the top in Austria that started when Kurz pulled the plug on his coalition with the far-right Freedom Party after a video emergedshowing that party’s leader appearing to be offering lucrative government contracts to a purported Russian investor.
A new election is already planned for September and President Alexander Van der Bellen needs to appoint a caretaker government to serve until then.
Less than three hours after losing his job, Kurz appeared before a cheering crowd outside party offices in Vienna, pledging that “the changes that we began two years ago will not end today.” He said he looked forward to helping the interim government ensure stability in the coming months, and would fight to win back his position.
“In the end, the people will decide in September, and I’m happy about that,” he said to chants from the crowd of “Chancellor Kurz!”
He lashed out at the Freedom Party as well as the opposition Social Democrats, who brought the no-confidence vote, saying from them “we have only heard one thing, that Kurz must go. That’s the only platform of those two parties and I’m afraid to say I must disappoint them both: I’m still here.”
No-confidence votes are common in Austrian politics, but this is the first one to have succeeded in its modern history. The result makes Kurz the shortest-serving chancellor since 1945 with 525 days in office, according to the Austria Press Agency.
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