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Austrian People's Party

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Template:Short description Template:Use American EnglishTemplate:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox political party

The Austrian People's Party (Template:Langx Template:IPA, ÖVP Template:IPA) is a Christian-democratic and liberal-conservative political party in Austria.

Since January 2025, the party has been led by Christian Stocker (as an acting leader). It is currently the second-largest party in the National Council, with 51 of the 183 seats, and won 26.3% of votes cast in the 2024 legislative election. It holds seats in all nine state legislatures, and is part of government in seven, of which it leads six. The ÖVP is a member of the International Democracy Union and the European People's Party. It sits with the EPP group in the European Parliament; of Austria's 19 MEPs, 5 are members of the ÖVP. It is the second largest party in Europe by membership.

An unofficial successor to the Christian Social Party of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the ÖVP was founded immediately following the re-establishment of the Republic of Austria in 1945. Since then, it has been one of the two traditional major parties in Austria, alongside the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ). It was the most popular party until 1970, and has traditionally governed in a grand coalition with the SPÖ. It was the senior partner in grand coalitions from 1945 to 1966 and the junior partner from 1986 to 2000 and 2007–2017. The ÖVP also briefly governed alone from 1966 to 1970. After the 1999 election, the party formed a coalition with the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) until 2003, when a coalition with the FPÖ splinter Alliance for the Future of Austria was formed, which lasted until 2007.

History

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The ÖVP is the successor of the Christian Social Party, a staunchly conservative movement founded in 1893 by Karl Lueger, mayor of Vienna and highly controversial right-wing populist. Most of the members of the party during its founding belonged to the former Fatherland Front, which was led by chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss, also a member of the Christian Social Party before the Anschluss. While still sometimes honored by ÖVP members for resisting Adolf Hitler, the regime built by Dollfuss was authoritarian in nature and has been dubbed as Austrofascism. In its present form, the ÖVP was established immediately after the restoration of Austria's independence in 1945 and it has been represented in both the Federal Assembly ever since. In terms of Federal Assembly seats, the ÖVP has consistently been the strongest or second-strongest party and as such it has led or at least been a partner in most Austria's federal cabinets.

File:Mitgliederzahl parteien Österreichs - Party membership of parties in Austria.png
Party membership of ÖVP (in turquoise), since 1945.

In the 1945 Austrian legislative election, the ÖVP won a landslide victory in Austria's first postwar election, winning almost half the popular vote and an absolute majority in the legislature. However, memories of the hyper-partisanship that had plagued the First Republic prompted the ÖVP to maintain the grand coalition with the Communist Party of Austria (KPÖ) and the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) that had governed the country since the restoration of independence in early 1945. The ÖVP remained the senior partner in a coalition with the SPÖ until 1966 and governed alone from 1966 to 1970. It reentered the government in 1986, but has never been completely out of power since the restoration of Austrian independence in 1945 due to a longstanding tradition that all major interest groups were to be consulted on policy.

After the 1999 Austrian legislative election, several months of negotiations ended in early 2000 when the ÖVP formed a coalition government with the right-wing populist Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) led by Jörg Haider. The FPÖ had won just a few hundred more votes than the ÖVP, but was considered far too controversial to lead a government. The ÖVP's Wolfgang Schüssel became Chancellor—the first ÖVP Chancellor of Austria since 1970. This caused widespread outrage in Europe and the European Union imposed informal diplomatic sanctions on Austria, the first time that it imposed sanctions on a member state. Bilateral relations were frozen (including contacts and meetings at an inter-governmental level) and Austrian candidates would not be supported for posts in European Union international offices.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Austria threatened to veto all applications by countries for European Union membership until the sanctions were lifted.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> A few months later, these sanctions were dropped as a result of a fact-finding mission by three former European prime ministers, the so-called "three wise men". The 2002 legislative election resulted in a landslide victory (42.27% of the vote) for the ÖVP under Schüssel. Haider's FPÖ was reduced to 10.16% of the vote. At the state level, the ÖVP has long dominated the rural states of Lower Austria, Upper Austria, Salzburg, Styria, Tyrol and Vorarlberg. It is less popular in the city-state of Vienna and in the rural, but less strongly Catholic states of Burgenland and Carinthia. In 2004, it lost its plurality in the State of Salzburg, where they kept its result in seats (14) in 2009. In 2005, it lost its plurality in Styria for the first time.

After the Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZÖ) split from the FPÖ in 2005, the BZÖ replaced the FPÖ in the government coalition which lasted until 2007. Austria for the first time had a government containing a party that was founded during the parliamentary term. In the 2006 Austrian legislative election, the ÖVP were defeated and after much negotiations agreed to become junior partner in a grand coalition with the SPÖ, with new party chairman Wilhelm Molterer as Finance Minister and Vice-Chancellor under SPÖ leader Alfred Gusenbauer, who became Chancellor. The 2008 Austrian legislative election saw the ÖVP lose 15 seats, with a further 8.35% decrease in its share of the vote. However, the ÖVP won the largest share of the vote (30.0%) in the 2009 European Parliament election with 846,709 votes, although their number of seats remained the same.

The ÖVP had minor losses in the 2013 Austrian legislative election, and the grand coalition with the SPÖ continued until the 2017 Austrian legislative election, when the ÖVP changed its colour to turquoise and won its first legislative election since 2002. The party underwent a change in its image after Sebastian Kurz became chairman, changing its colour from the traditional black to turquoise, and adopting the alternate name The New People's Party (Template:Langx).<ref name="Our History">Template:Cite web</ref> It became the largest party after the 2017 election, and formed a coalition government with the FPÖ.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This collapsed eighteen months later due to the Ibiza affair, leading to the 2019 election, after which the ÖVP formed a new coalition with The Greens.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

An investigation into the Ibiza affair by a parliamentary subcommittee, an unstable Cabinet plagued by resignations, and ultimately a corruption inquiry, forced Kurz to resign the chancellorship in October 2021. Kurz was replaced by Karl Nehammer in 2021 as party leader and Chancellor. In the 2024 legislative election, the party fell to second behind the FPÖ. Following the surge of the FPÖ in various polls throughout late 2024 and early 2025, as well as the collapse of the ÖVP-SPÖ-NEOS coalition talks, Nehammer resigned as party leader and was replaced with Christian Stocker as acting leader.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> After failed talks with the FPÖ, the party would eventually form a coalition with the SPÖ and NEOS, with Stocker as Chancellor.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ideology and platform

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Template:Conservatism in Austria

The ÖVP is described as Christian-democratic,<ref name="Peverini2023">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="MarksWilson">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Krouwel2012">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> conservative,<ref name="GrandeDolezal">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Givens2005">Template:Cite book</ref> and liberal-conservative.<ref name="Peverini2023"/><ref name="Güntzel2010">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="HM2018">Template:Cite book</ref> The party has also been described as a catch-all party of the centre-right, in the vein of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany.<ref name="KesselmanKrieger2008">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Wiliarty2010">Template:Cite book</ref> For most of its existence, the ÖVP has explicitly defined itself as Catholic and anti-socialist, with the ideals of subsidiarity as defined by the encyclical Quadragesimo anno and decentralisation.

For the first election after World War II, the ÖVP presented itself as the Austrian Party (Template:Langx), was anti-Marxist and regarded itself as the Party of the centre (Template:Langx). The ÖVP consistently held power—either alone or in so-called black–red coalition with the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ)—until 1970, when the SPÖ formed a minority government with the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ). The ÖVP's economic policies during the era generally upheld a social market economy.

The party's campaign for the 2017 legislative election under the party chairman Sebastian Kurz was dominated by a rightward shift in policy which included a promised crackdown on illegal immigration and a fight against political Islam,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> making it more similar to the program of the FPÖ, the party that Kurz chose as his coalition partner after the ÖVP won the election. The party underwent a change in its image after Kurz became chairman, changing its colour from the traditional black to turquoise, and adopting the name The new People's Party (Template:Langx).<ref name="Our History"/>

Organization

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Symbols

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Chairpersons since 1945

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The chart below shows a timeline of ÖVP chairpersons and the Chancellors of Austria. The left black bar shows all the chairpersons (Bundesparteiobleute, abbreviated as CP) of the ÖVP party and the right bar shows the corresponding make-up of the Austrian government at that time. The red (SPÖ) and black (ÖVP) colours correspond to which party led the federal government (Bundesregierung, abbreviated as Govern.). The last names of the respective Chancellors are shown, with the Roman numeral standing for the cabinets.

<timeline> ImageSize = width:400 height:530 PlotArea = width:350 height:450 left:50 bottom:50 Legend = columns:3 left:50 top:25 columnwidth:50

DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1945 till:2023 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1945

  1. there is no automatic collision detection,
  2. so shift texts up or down manually to avoid overlap

Colors =

 id:ÖVP  value:gray(0.25) legend:ÖVP
 id:SPÖ  value:red    legend:SPÖ
 id:independent value:gray(0.85) legend:independent
  1. id:FPÖ value:blue legend:FPÖ

Define $dx = 25 # shift text to right side of bar Define $dy = -4 # adjust height

PlotData =

 bar:CP color:red width:25 mark:(line,white) align:left fontsize:S
 from:1945  till:1945 shift:($dx,1)      color:ÖVP    text:Leopold Kunschak
 from:1945  till:1952 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Leopold Figl
 from:1952  till:1960 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Julius Raab
 from:1960  till:1963 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Alfons Gorbach
 from:1963  till:1970 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Josef Klaus
 from:1970  till:1971 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Hermann Withalm
 from:1971  till:1975 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Karl Schleinzer
 from:1975  till:1979 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Josef Taus
 from:1979  till:1989 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Alois Mock
 from:1989  till:1991 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Josef Riegler
 from:1991  till:1995 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Erhard Busek
 from:1995  till:2007 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Wolfgang Schüssel
 from:2007  till:2008 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Wilhelm Molterer
 from:2008  till:2011 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Josef Pröll
 from:2011  till:2014 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text: Michael Spindelegger
 from:2014  till:2017 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text: Reinhold Mitterlehner
 from:2017  till:end shift:($dx,$dy)     color:ÖVP    text: Sebastian Kurz
 from:2021  till:end shift:($dx,$dy)     color:ÖVP    text: Karl Nehammer
 bar:Govern. color:red width:25 mark:(line,white) align:left fontsize:7
 from:1945  till:1946 shift:($dx,-2)     color:SPÖ    text:Renner
 from:1946  till:1949 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Figl I
 from:1949  till:1952 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Figl II
 from:1952  till:1953 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Figl III
 from:1953  till:1956 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Raab I
 from:1956  till:1959 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Raab II
 from:1959  till:1960 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Raab III
 from:1960  till:1961 shift:($dx,-2)     color:ÖVP    text:Raab IV
 from:1961  till:1963 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Gorbach I
 from:1963  till:1964 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Gorbach II
 from:1964  till:1966 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Klaus I
 from:1966  till:1970 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Klaus II
 from:1970  till:1971 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Kreisky I
 from:1971  till:1975 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Kreisky II
 from:1975  till:1979 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Kreisky III
 from:1979  till:1983 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Kreisky IV
 from:1983  till:1986 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Sinowatz
 from:1986  till:1987 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Vranitzky I
 from:1987  till:1990 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Vranitzky II
 from:1990  till:1994 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Vranitzky III
 from:1994  till:1996 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Vranitzky IV
 from:1996  till:1997 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Vranitzky V
 from:1997  till:2000 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Klima
 from:2000  till:2003 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Schüssel I
 from:2003  till:2007 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Schüssel II
 from:2007  till:2008 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Gusenbauer
 from:2008  till:2016 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Faymann
 from:2016  till:2017 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:SPÖ    text:Kern
 from:2017  till:2019 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:ÖVP    text:Kurz I
 from:2019  till:2020 shift:($dx,$dy)    color:independent text:Bierlein
 from:2020  till:2021 shift:($dx,$dy)     color:ÖVP    text:Kurz II
 from:2021  till:2021 shift:($dx,$dy)     color:ÖVP    text:Schallenberg
 from:2021  till:end shift:($dx,$dy)     color:ÖVP    text:Nehammer

</timeline>

Election results

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National Council

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Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Government
1945 Leopold Figl 1,602,227 49.80 (#1) Template:Composition bar New Template:Yes2
1949 1,846,581 44.03 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 8 Template:Yes2
1953 1,781,777 41.26 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Yes2
1956 Julius Raab 1,999,986 45.96 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 8 Template:Yes2
1959 1,928,043 44.19 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Yes2
1962 Alfons Gorbach 2,024,501 45.43 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:Yes2
1966 Josef Klaus 2,191,109 48.35 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 4 Template:Yes2
1970 2,051,012 44.69 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 7 Template:No2
1971 Hermann Withalm 1,964,713 43.11 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:No2
1975 Josef Taus 1,981,291 42.95 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady 0 Template:No2
1979 1,981,739 41.90 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:No2
1983 Alois Mock 2,097,808 43.22 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 4 Template:No2
1986 2,003,663 41.29 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 4 Template:Yes2
1990 Josef Riegler 1,508,600 32.06 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 17 Template:Yes2
1994 Erhard Busek 1,281,846 27.67 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 8 Template:Yes2
1995 Wolfgang Schüssel 1,370,510 28.29 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady 0 Template:Yes2
1999 1,243,672 26.91 (#3) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady 0 Template:Yes2
2002 2,076,833 42.30 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 27 Template:Yes2
2006 1,616,493 34.33 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 13 Template:Yes2
2008 Wilhelm Molterer 1,269,656 25.98 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 15 Template:Yes2
2013 Michael Spindelegger 1,125,876 23.99 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 4 Template:Yes2
2017 Sebastian Kurz 1,341,930 31.47 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 15 Template:Yes2
2019 1,789,417 37.46 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 9 Template:Yes2
2024 Karl Nehammer 1,246,676 26.27 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 19 Template:Yes2

President

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Election Candidate First round Second round
Votes % Result Votes % Result
1951 Heinrich Gleißner 1,725,451 40.1 Template:Depends 2,006,322 47.9 Template:No2
1957 Wolfgang Denk 2,159,604 48.9 Template:No2
1963 Julius Raab 1,814,125 40.6 Template:No2
1965 Alfons Gorbach 2,324,436 49.3 Template:No2
1971 Kurt Waldheim 2,224,809 47.2 Template:No2
1974 Alois Lugger 2,238,470 48.3 Template:No2
1980 No candidate
1986 Kurt Waldheim 2,343,463 49.6 Template:Depends 2,464,787 53.9 Template:Yes2
1992 Thomas Klestil 1,728,234 37.2 Template:Depends 2,528,006 56.9 Template:Yes2
1998 Thomas Klestil 2,644,034 63.4 Template:Yes2
2004 Benita Ferrero-Waldner 1,969,326 47.6 Template:No2
2010 No candidate
2016 Andreas Khol 475,767 11.1 Template:No2
2022 No candidate

European Parliament

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Election List leader Votes % Seats +/– EP Group
1996 Ursula Stenzel 1,124,921 29.65 (#1) Template:Composition bar New EPP
1999 859,175 30.67 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady 0
2004 817,716 32.70 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 EPP-ED
2009 Ernst Strasser 858,921 29.98 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady 0 EPP
2014 Othmar Karas 761,896 26.98 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1
2019 1,305,954 34.55 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2
2024 Reinhold Lopatka 864,072 24.52 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2
State Leader Year Votes % Seats +/– Government
Burgenland Christian Sagartz 2025 42,923 22.0 (#3) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:No2
Carinthia Martin Gruber 2023 51,637 17.0 (#3) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Yes2
Lower Austria Johanna Mikl-Leitner 2023 359,194 39.9 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 6 Template:Yes2
Salzburg Wilfried Haslauer 2023 81,752 30.4 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Yes2
Styria Christopher Drexler 2024 177,580 26.8 (#2) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 5 Template:Yes2
Tyrol Anton Mattle 2022 119,167 34.7 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Yes2
Upper Austria Thomas Stelzer 2021 303,835 37.6 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Yes2
Vienna Karl Mahrer 2025 63,050 9.71 (#5) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease Template:No2
Vorarlberg Markus Wallner 2024 70,638 38.3 (#1) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Yes2

See also

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Template:Portal

Notes

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Template:Notelist

References

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Template:Reflist

Further reading

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Template:Commons category

Template:European People's Party Template:International Democracy Union Template:Austrian political parties Template:Authority control