Sebastian Kurz returns in Austria as the world's youngest democratically elected leader (AFP Photo/JOE KLAMAR) |
Vienna (AFP) - The leader of Austria's conservatives Sebastian Kurz was sworn in Tuesday as the world's youngest democratically elected leader, at the head of an unlikely coalition with the Greens following the collapse of his previous alliance with the far-right.
Vowing to
"protect the climate and the borders", the 33-year-old has become
chancellor of the Alpine country's first government to include the Greens, an
arrangement called "exotic" and "unlikely" by Austrian
media.
Speaking at
a handover ceremony with his predecessor Brigitte Bierlein, Kurz said it was
"good to be able to continue working for Austria" and promised:
"We will strive every day to give our best."
Kurz's
People's Party (OeVP) and the Greens agreed last week to govern together after
the last administration with the far-right fell apart in a corruption scandal.
Both the OeVP and the ecologist party made key gains in September's snap polls.
President Alexander
Van der Bellen reminded the new government that "citizens have great
expectations of you," adding that "trust must be rebuilt".
The new
government aims to please both parties by pushing for Austria to be carbon
neutral by 2040 and also continuing previous strict anti-immigration measures.
Some
observers think that if successful the alliance could become a model for other
European countries as nations across the continent grapple with populist
sentiments but also climate change.
'Best of
both worlds'
Kurz --
whose conservative OeVP has been in government for more than three decades --
has defended the undertaking as combining "the best of both worlds".
Werner Kogler (C), leader of the Austrian Green party, will take the post of vice-chancellor (AFP Photo/BARBARA GINDL) |
The OeVP
has 10 ministers in the new coalition, while the Greens have four with its
party chief Werner Kogler, 58, taking on the vice-chancellorship.
Among the
ministers being sworn in Tuesday more than half are women, including the
defence minister. Many are in their 30s and 40s.
A Green
politician and former activist will front an enlarged environment ministry,
which includes traffic, energy and technology as well.
The Greens
have also nominated an openly lesbian party veteran to hold the culture portfolio,
while a Green legal expert of Bosnian origin, who arrived in Austria as a child
refugee, will head the justice ministry.
No 'love
marriage'
But for all
that's new, it's not a "love marriage", according to analyst Johannes
Huber.
"As he
(Kurz) says at every opportunity, they are very different parties", which
have always been rivals rather than allies on a national level until now, Huber
told AFP.
And their
detractors are many, including some in their own ranks.
The
Far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) -- the third strongest party in parliament after
the OeVP and the Social Democrats (SPOe) -- was quick to denounce Kurz's
"swing to the left" and the "dangerous experiment" out of
which "nothing good" can come for the country of 8.8 million people.
The world's
youngest political leaders. Austria's Sebastian Kurz was sworn
in on January 7.
(AFP Photo/Jonathan WALTER)
|
The SPOe
too criticised the new government's programme, saying social questions hadn't
been addressed well enough.
Kurz first
became the world's youngest chancellor in a government with the FPOe from
December 2017 until May last year, driving a hard line against immigration and
brushing off a steady stream of racist and anti-Semitic incidents involving his
far-right colleagues.
But then
the FPOe leader and vice-chancellor became engulfed in a graft scandal, leading
to the collapse of the coalition and snap elections.
Disappointed
FPOe supporters dealt the party a setback in the polls, many shifting their
votes to the OeVP which won 37.5 percent -- an increase of almost six points
from 2017.
The Greens,
who failed to get into parliament in a shock result in 2017, garnered 13.8
percent as climate change replaced immigration as a top voter concern.
Party
officials have said they have had to make "painful" compromises to
reach the agreement with the powerful conservatives.
"The
Greens are very pragmatic... It is important for the party to take on
responsibility on a national level," Huber said.
Kurz has
promised Austrians a stable government for the next five years.
However,
"the new coalition has not provided a complete answer on how they plan to
finance their fiscal plans," according to analyst Katharina Koenz of
Oxford Economics.
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