People's Party (OeVP) leader Sebastian Kurz says his two-party coalition will 'protect the climate and borders' (AFP Photo/ALEX HALADA) |
Vienna (AFP) - Austria's first coalition between conservatives and Greens announced Thursday that it would aim for carbon neutrality by 2040 to make the country a European "forerunner" in climate protection.
The two
disparate parties have agreed to govern in what Greens leader Werner Kohler
called a "gamble" after key election gains in September.
Their
alliance means People's Party (Oe Vp) leader Sebastian Kur, 33, returns as
chancellor after his previous coalition with the far-right broke apart earlier
this year owing to a corruption scandal.
It marks
the first time the Greens enter government on a national level though the Oe Vp
holds on to controversial anti-immigration measures that have deeply divided
Austrians.
"It's
worth the gamble" to work with the conservatives, Kohler told reporters when
presenting the government programme.
The carbon
neutrality goal -- meaning greenhouse gas emissions are balanced with measures
that absorb or eliminate carbon -- is ahead of Europe's 2050 ambition.
But the
300-page government programme also highlights security needs, the
conservatives' main campaign platform.
"Migration
will stay at the heart of my politics," said Kur, who has styled himself
as a tough anti-immigration fighter, reiterating his view that the coalition's
parties had "succeeded in uniting the best of both worlds".
'Daring
experiment'
European
Council President Charles Michel said 2020 began with "great news from
Austria."
He tweeted:
"25 years after its accession, Austria renews its commitment to the
European project and is set to become a leader in the fight against climate
change."
Observers
say Germany and other nations could follow suit for the unlikely marriage of
conservatives and ecologists as politicians seek to cater to voters'
increasingly populist sentiments as well as worries about climate change.
But many
have also warned that the alliance stands on thin ice as particularly the
Greens have made key compromises.
A column in
the left-leaning Standard on Thursday described the coalition as a "daring
experiment" and a "political adventure". Tabloid Oesterreich
billed the Oe Vp as "powerful as never before".
Kur
announced his party would head 10 ministries, including the interior, foreign,
defence and finance.
The Greens
will have charge of an enlarged environment ministry, as well as hold the
justice, social affairs and sports and culture portfolios with Kohler, 58,
nominated as Kur’s vice-chancellor.
In
September polls, the Greens gained 13.9 percent of the vote in their best-ever
result as the environment replaced immigration as top concern.
The Oe Vp
got 37.5 percent as disappointed voters of the scandal-tainted far-right
Freedom Party (F Poe) flocked to Kur’s party.
It will now
be up to the Greens' almost 280 delegates to give the final go-ahead to the
agreement at a party congress on Saturday. The new government is then expected
to be sworn in next week.
'50-50
survival chance'
Among a
raft of proposals, the programme spells out that all energy should come from
renewable resources by 2030 and for more to be invested in public transport.
Though
renewable energies already account for about a third of Austria's consumption
-- almost double the EU average -- the nation of 8.8 million people has been
among few EU members that have seen their greenhouse gas emissions continue to
increase between 1990 and 2017.
Regarding
immigration and security, the coalition wants to introduce preventive detention
and extend the headscarf ban for school girls -- clauses which will be hard to
swallow for some Greens.
Political
analyst Johannes Huber told AFP that the alliance had a "50-50
chance" of survival, depending on which topics came up in the next few
years.
Standard
daily columnist Eric Frey also wrote that Kur and Kohler would need a
"skillfulness as few politicians before them" should tricky issues
arise, such as a surge in the number of asylum seekers, worsening climate
change or an economic downturn.
Opposition
leaders have already criticised the new coalition, with the Social Democrats
(Sope) saying the Greens have failed to make a mark, while F Poe leader Norbert
Hofer said the programme contained "mainly hot air".
But both
the Sope and the F Poe are weakened, with the Social Democrats suffering their
worst-ever results in the September polls and the far-right tumbling after the
"Ibiza-gate" graft scandal brought down their then-leader and
vice-chancellor in May, causing the government to collapse.
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