2018 Salzburg state election explained

Election Name:2018 Salzburg state election
Country:Salzburg
Flag Year:state
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2013 Salzburg state election
Previous Year:2013
Next Election:2023 Salzburg state election
Next Year:2023
Seats For Election:All 36 seats in the Landtag of Salzburg
Majority Seats:19
Election Date:22 April 2018
Turnout:253,396 (65.0%)
6.0%
Leader1:Wilfried Haslauer Jr.
Party1:Austrian People's Party (2017)
Last Election1:11 seats, 29.0%
Seats1:15
Seat Change1: 4
Popular Vote1:94,642
Percentage1:37.8%
Swing1: 8.8%
Leader2:Walter Steidl
Party2:Social Democratic Party of Austria
Last Election2:9 seats, 23.8%
Seats2:8
Seat Change2: 1
Popular Vote2:50,175
Percentage2:20.0%
Swing2: 3.8%
Leader3:Marlene Svazek
Party3:Freedom Party of Austria
Last Election3:6 seats, 17.0%
Seats3:7
Seat Change3: 1
Popular Vote3:47,194
Percentage3:18.8%
Swing3: 1.8%
Leader4:Astrid Rössler
Party4:The Greens – The Green Alternative
Last Election4:7 seats, 20.2%
Seats4:3
Seat Change4: 4
Popular Vote4:23,337
Percentage4:9.3%
Swing4: 10.9%
Leader5:Sepp Schellhorn
Party5:NEOS – The New Austria and Liberal Forum
Last Election5:Did not contest
Seats5:3
Seat Change5: 3
Popular Vote5:18,225
Percentage5:7.3%
Swing5: 7.3%
Map Size:300px
Governor
Before Election:Wilfried Haslauer Jr.
Before Party:Austrian People's Party
After Election:Wilfried Haslauer Jr.
After Party:Austrian People's Party

The 2018 Salzburg state election was held on 22 April 2018 to elect the members of the Landtag of Salzburg.

The conservative Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) placed first, taking 37.8% of votes on a swing of almost nine percentage points, a decisive lead over the second-placed Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) which slipped four points, finishing on just over 20%. The Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) made small gains. The Greens were the main loser of the election; their voteshare fell by over half from 2013. NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS) contested their first state election in Salzburg, debuting at 7.3%. Team Stronach, which had won 8.3% in the previous election, did not compete.[1]

The previous government coalition of the ÖVP, Greens, and Team Stronach now lacked a majority due to the absence of Team Stronach. After negotiations, NEOS agreed to join a coalition with the ÖVP and Greens, marking the first time NEOS had participated in a state government in Austria.[2]

Background

After the 2013 election, the SPÖ government was replaced by a coalition of the ÖVP, Greens, and Team Stronach. In November 2015, Hans Mayr, the only member of the state government from Team Stronach, left the party, but continued to serve in government as an independent. In 2016 he founded his own party, the Salzburg Citizens' Community (SBG), with the intention of running in the 2018 state election.[3]

In June 2015, conflicts arose between the federal FPÖ and the party's Salzburg branch, culminating in the expulsion of former regional chairmen Strache Schnell and Rupert Doppler from the party. They subsequently founded the Free Party Salzburg (FPS), which was joined by five of the FPÖ's six Landtag deputies. They sought to run in the 2018 election.[4] [5]

Electoral system

The 36 seats of the Landtag of Salzburg are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between six 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 Hare quota, with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.[6]

Contesting parties

The table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.

NameIdeologyLeader2013 result
Votes (%)Seats
ÖVPAustrian People's Party
Christian democracyWilfried Haslauer Jr.29.0%
SPÖSocial Democratic Party of Austria
Social democracyWalter Steidl23.8%
GRÜNEThe Greens – The Green Alternative
Green politicsAstrid Rössler20.2%
FPÖFreedom Party of Austria
Right-wing populism
Euroscepticism
Marlene Svazek17.0%

Team Stronach, which contested the previous election and won 8.3% of votes and three seats did not contest the 2018 election.

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

Opinion polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
ÖVPSPÖGrüneFPÖNEOSFPSMAYROthersLead
2018 state electiondata-sort-value="2018-04-22"22 Apr 201837.820.09.318.87.34.51.70.517.8
IMASdata-sort-value="2018-03-29"1–19 Mar 201880032–3524–2614–1716–1866–11
GMKdata-sort-value="2018-03-17"17 Mar 2018?40211118622019
IMASdata-sort-value="2018-03-08"February 201880031–3323–2514–1618–207–90.5–1.56–10
Hajekdata-sort-value="2018-02-25"25 Feb 201880233–4118–247–1120–265–91117–21
GMKdata-sort-value="2017-12-20"December 2017?41181116535123
IMASdata-sort-value="2017-12-14"4–14 Dec 201780035211516911.51.514
Jaksch & Partnerdata-sort-value="2017-12-14"20 Nov–14 Dec 201780834231024811010
2013 state electiondata-sort-value="2013-05-05"5 May 201329.023.820.217.010.05.2

Results

align=center colspan=7
PartyVotes%+/−Seats+/−
bgcolor=Austrian People's Party (ÖVP)94,64237.78+8.7715+4
bgcolor=Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ)50,17520.03–3.808–1
bgcolor=Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ)47,19418.84+1.817+1
bgcolor=The Greens – The Green Alternative (GRÜNE)23,3379.31–10.873–4
bgcolor=NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS)18,2257.27+7.273+3
Free Party Salzburg (FPS)11,3864.54New0New
List Hans Mayr – Salzburg Citizens' Community (MAYR)4,3851.75New0New
bgcolor=KPÖ Plus (KPÖ)1,0140.40+0.070±0
bgcolor=Christian Party of Austria (CPÖ)1810.07+0.070±0
Invalid/blank votes2,857
Total253,396100360
align=left colspan=2Registered voters/turnout390,09164.96–6.00
align=left colspan=7 Source: Salzburg State Government

Results by constituency

ConstituencyÖVPSPÖFPÖGrüneNEOSFPSOthersTotal
seats
Turnout
class=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable% class=unsortableclass=unsortable%
29.9 2 23.2 2 15.9 1 15.8 1 9.2 3.5 2.4 6 57.3
40.1 1 20.4 18.0 9.2 7.1 3.9 1.4 1 68.3
39.5 3 16.8 1 20.6 2 9.5 8.2 3.2 2.0 6 67.4
39.9 1 21.0 1 20.8 1 5.0 5.5 4.2 3.7 3 68.6
48.7 17.4 21.1 4.2 4.1 3.4 1.1 0 71.4
38.5 2 21.1 1 17.7 1 5.7 5.5 9.6 1.8 4 65.1
Remaining seats 6 3 2 2 3 0 16
Total 37.8 15 20.0 8 18.8 7 9.3 3 7.3 3 4.5 0 2.2 36 65.0
Source: Salzburg State Government

Maps

Aftermath

On 23 April, Astrid Rössler announced her resignation as Greens leader, but remained in office on an interim basis and to participate in coalitions negotiations.[7]

The ÖVP initiated exploratory talks with all parties in the Landtag. On 2 May, the state ÖVP executive voted to begin negotiate with the Greens and NEOS for a governing coalition. Haslauer described this arrangement as "a political alliance of the centre"; however, ÖVP federal Chancellor Sebastian Kurz advocated a coalition with the FPÖ.[8] [9] On 25 May, coalition negotiations between the three parties were finalised, and the cabinet was presented. It was dubbed the "Dirndl coalition", after a traditional dress which is coloured similarly to the parties involved (black, green, and pink). The government was sworn in on 13 June.[2]

References

Salzburg state government: Election information and Results

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Landtag election on 22 April 2018. Salzburg State Government.
  2. Web site: "Salzburg election: "Dirndl coalition" is certain". 25 May 2018. Die Presse.
  3. Web site: Ex-Stronach State Councillor Mayr founds Salzburg Citizens' Association. 20 April 2016. Der Standard.
  4. Web site: Eight FPÖ expulsions fixed. 16 June 2015. ORF.
  5. Web site: FPÖ-Salzburg: Court prohibits the name "Freiheitliche". 31 July 2015. Die Presse.
  6. Web site: Election results. Salzburg State Government.
  7. Web site: Green debacle in Salzburg - Rössler goes, but remains for the time being. 23 April 2018. Salzburger Nachrichten.
  8. Web site: Coalition question: Haslauer has to show his colours. 2 May 2018. Salzburger Nachrichten.
  9. Web site: New Salzburg state government: Haslauer wants "Alliance of the Centre". 3 May 2018. Salzburger Nachrichten.