2015 Viennese state election explained

Election Name:2015 Viennese state election
Country:Vienna
Flag Year:state
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2010 Viennese state election
Previous Year:2010
Next Election:2020 Viennese state election
Next Year:2020
Seats For Election:All 100 seats in the Gemeinderat and Landtag of Vienna

All 13 seats in the state government
Election Date:11 October 2015
Turnout:854,406 (74.7%)
7.1%
Leader1:Michael Häupl
Party1:Social Democratic Party of Austria
Last Election1:49 seats, 44.3%
Seats1:44
Seat Change1: 5
Popular Vote1:329,772
Percentage1:39.6%
Swing1: 4.7%
Leader2:Heinz-Christian Strache
Party2:Freedom Party of Austria
Last Election2:27 seats, 25.8%
Seats2:34
Seat Change2: 7
Popular Vote2:256,448
Percentage2:30.8%
Swing2: 5.0%
Leader3:Maria Vassilakou
Party3:The Greens – The Green Alternative
Last Election3:11 seats, 12.6%
Seats3:10
Seat Change3: 1
Popular Vote3:98,626
Percentage3:11.8%
Swing3: 0.8%
Leader4:Manfred Juraczka
Party4:Austrian People's Party
Last Election4:13 seats, 14.0%
Seats4:7
Seat Change4: 6
Popular Vote4:76,958
Percentage4:9.2%
Swing4: 4.8%
Leader5:Beate Meinl-Reisinger
Party5:NEOS – The New Austria and Liberal Forum
Last Election5:Did not exist
Seats5:5
Seat Change5: 5
Popular Vote5:51,305
Percentage5:6.2%
Swing5:New party
Map Size:350px
Mayor and Governor
Before Election:Michael Häupl
Before Party:Social Democratic Party of Austria
After Election:Michael Häupl
After Party:Social Democratic Party of Austria

The 2015 Viennese state election was held on 11 October 2015 to elect the members of the Gemeinderat and Landtag of Vienna.

The election saw losses for the centre-left Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) and conservative Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), the traditional major parties of Austrian politics, and gains for the right-wing populist Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) and liberal NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS). The SPÖ recorded its worst result since 1996, while the ÖVP suffered its worst ever result in an Austrian election, placing fourth with just 9.2% of votes.[1]

Background

The Viennese constitution mandates that cabinet positions in the city government (city councillors, German: Stadtsräten) be allocated between parties proportionally in accordance with the share of votes won by each; this is known as Proporz. The number of city councillors is voted upon by the Landtag after each election, and may legally vary between nine and fifteen. City councillors are divided into two groups – "senior" councillors, who hold a cabinet portfolio, and "non-executive" councillors who do not. Non-executive councillors may vote in cabinet meetings, but do not otherwise hold any government responsibility. In practice, parties seek to form a coalition which holds a majority in both the Landtag and city government. City councillors bound to the coalition become senior councillors, while the opposition are relegated to non-executive status.

In the 2010 state election, the SPÖ lost its majority. The SPÖ won eight councillors, the FPÖ three, the ÖVP one, and the Greens one. The SPÖ formed a coalition with the Greens.

Electoral system

The 100 seats of the Gemeinderat and Landtag of Vienna are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between eighteen multi-member constituencies. For parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 5 percent state-wide electoral threshold. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Droop quota, with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method applied to surplus votes at the state level, to ensure overall semiproportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.[2]

Contesting parties

The table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.

NameIdeologyLeader2010 result
Votes (%)SeatsCouncillors
SPÖSocial Democratic Party of Austria
Social democracyMichael Häupl44.3%
FPÖFreedom Party of Austria
Right-wing populism
Euroscepticism
Heinz-Christian Strache25.8%
ÖVPAustrian People's Party
Christian democracyManfred Juraczka14.0%
GRÜNEThe Greens – The Green Alternative
Green politicsMaria Vassilakou12.6%

In addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, eight parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.

Results

align=center colspan=9
PartyVotes%+/−Seats+/−+/−
bgcolor=Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ)329,77339.59–4.7544–57–1
bgcolor=Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ)256,45130.79+5.0234+74+1
bgcolor=The Greens – The Green Alternative (GRÜNE)98,62611.84–0.8010–11±0
bgcolor=Austrian People's Party (ÖVP)76,9599.24–4.757–61±0
bgcolor=NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS)51,3056.16New5New0New
bgcolor=palevioletredVienna Differently (ANDAS)8,9371.07New0New0New
Together for Vienna (GfW)7,6080.91New0New0New
We want Freedom of Choice - List Pollischansky (WWW)1,7090.21New0New0New
We for Floridsdorf (WIFF)1,3460.16New0New0New
Men's Party (M)1520.02New0New0New
bgcolor=Socialist Left Party (SLP)620.01±0.000±00±0
Free Democrats (FREIE)590.01New0New0New
Invalid/blank votes21,419
Total854,4061001000130
align=left colspan=2Registered voters/turnout1,143,07674.75+7.12
align=left colspan=9 Source: Viennese Government

Results by constituency

ConstituencySPÖFPÖGrüneÖVPNEOSOthersTotal
seats
Turnout
class=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable%
Centre 39.2 3 20.4 1 18.9 1 11.1 8.4 2.0 5 75.2
Inner West 37.5 2 17.3 1 22.5 1 11.6 9.3 1.8 4 79.1
42.7 2 24.1 1 17.5 1 7.0 5.9 2.8 4 73.2
40.5 2 23.5 1 15.7 10.2 7.8 2.3 3 75.7
41.4 4 39.3 4 6.3 6.1 3.6 3.2 8 70.3
40.3 2 42.9 3 5.2 5.1 3.7 2.9 5 72.5
41.5 2 32.1 1 10.7 7.9 5.1 2.6 3 70.6
32.5 1 25.2 1 11.1 20.3 9.7 1.2 2 80.3
38.0 2 30.1 1 12.5 11.0 6.6 1.8 3 76.1
42.3 1 26.4 1 17.2 6.3 4.7 2.9 2 69.3
40.9 2 28.2 1 14.4 8.2 5.4 1.9 3 73.0
37.7 1 25.9 1 15.7 11.0 7.5 2.2 2 74.7
34.0 1 19.5 18.2 16.7 10.1 1.5 1 79.0
35.7 1 25.2 1 10.1 18.0 9.6 1.5 2 77.5
43.1 2 31.3 1 11.4 5.8 4.6 4.0 3 69.9
39.2 4 40.6 4 6.3 6.5 4.1 3.4 8 75.2
40.8 4 38.6 4 7.2 6.7 4.9 1.8 8 76.8
39.6 2 34.3 2 8.2 9.6 6.5 1.8 4 78.8
Remaining seats 6 5 7 7 5 30
Total 39.6 44 30.8 34 11.8 10 9.2 7 6.2 5 2.4 100 74.7
Source: Viennese Government

Aftermath

In light of the ÖVP's historically poor result, state chairman Manfred Juraczka announced his resignation on election night. He was succeeded by general-secretary Gernot Blümel.[3]

Ahead of the election, Greens top candidate and deputy mayor Maria Vassilakou stated she would resign if the Greens did not improve on their 2010 result.[4] However, after suffering a loss of 0.8% in the election, Vassilakou reneged on the pledge, instead seeking to renew the coalition with the SPÖ and secure a second term as deputy mayor.[5] She was subject to criticism from the public and her own party, with fellow Greens deputy Johannes Voggenhuber stating her broken promise demonstrated a "loss of reality" within the party leadership. The day after the election, Vassilakou offered her resignation to the Greens state congress, but it was rejected.[6] She was harshly criticised by SPÖ deputy Peko Baxant, who said "I really don't know if you can continue to work with such people."[7]

Post-election, Häupl announced he would seek a coalition with the Greens. He also stated that the SPÖ would be open to abolishing the non-executive councillors, but noted they had "a long way to go" due to the two-thirds Landtag majority required to amend the state constitution. Since the FPÖ won over a third of seats, it was entitled to take one of the two deputy mayor positions; this was filled by Johann Gudenus. He remained a non-executive councillor.[8] The SPÖ and Greens finalised a 150-page coalition agreement on 13 November, which was subsequently approved by both parties.[9] [10] The government was sworn in on 24 November.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gemeinderat election 2015. Viennese Government.
  2. Web site: RIS - Viennese Gemeinderat election act 1996. Viennese Government.
  3. Web site: Gernot Blümel takes over the Vienna People's Party. 12 October 2015. Kurier.
  4. Web site: Vassilakou: Resignation in the event of election loss. 27 August 2015. Kurier.
  5. Web site: Vassilakou: Withdrawal suddenly no longer an issue. 12 October 2015. Kleine Zeitung.
  6. Web site: Agitation over Vassilakou's resignation. 12 October 2015. Kronen Zeitung.
  7. Web site: No resignation: SPÖ official criticizes Vassilakou. 14 October 2015. Die Presse.
  8. Web site: "Beautifully bland" without conflict. 20 October 2015. ORF.
  9. Web site: Agreement on 150-page coalition paper. 13 November 2015. ORF.
  10. Web site: Red-green coalition sealed. 14 November 2015. ORF.
  11. Web site: Red-green starts on 24 November. 16 November 2015. ORF.