“Pointy on the button” – Salzburg election: left-wing bang effect in the super election year

Will Mozart’s city be governed again in the future by social democrats or “danklrot”? With the SPÖ and the KPÖ, the two left-of-center parties made it into the runoff election on March 24th.

The super election year started in Salzburg – and at least in the capital – with a real bang. The communist Kay-Michael Dankl achieved more than just a respectable success and made it into the runoff (see graphic below).if(!apaResc)var apaResc=function(a){var e=window.addEventListener?”addEventListener”:” attachEvent”,t,n;(0,window[e])(“attachEvent”==e?”onmessage”:”message”,function(e){if(e.data[a]) for(var t=document.getElementsByClassName(a),n=0;n!=t.length;n++) t[n].style.height=e.data[a]+”px”},!1)}; apaResc(“apa-0320-24″);if(!apaResc)var apaResc=function(a){var e=window.addEventListener?”addEventListener”:”attachEvent”,t,n;(0,window[e])(“attachEvent”==e?”onmessage”:”message”,function(e){if(e.data[a]) for(var t=document.getElementsByClassName(a),n=0;n!=t.length;n++) t[n].style.height=e.data[a]+”px”},!1)}; apaResc(“apa-0322-24”);The Sunday after next he has to duel with SPÖ candidate Bernhard Auinger, who was in the lead (subject to postal votes).The exciting election Sunday to read about. Black evening for the ÖVPIt was a black evening for the ÖVP. In the election in 2019, people benefited from the turquoise high under the then Chancellor Sebastian Kurz. Now the coveted mayor’s chair was lost again, but at least some of the “power in the country” remained. For example, the ÖVP was able to assert itself as the mayor’s party in Radstadt and Kuchl. The SPÖ not only succeeded in the city of Mozart, but also performed well in other cities, such as Hallein and Zell am See. All of this without the intervention of SPÖ leader Andreas Babler, who was in Hamburg, spoke at the SPD party conference on Saturday and attended a football game there on Sunday. But he wants to come to the runoff election. And the outcome of this red-red mayoral duel is completely open, as political professor Peter Filzmaier points out. Memories of the presidential election “This is a new election. I remember the 2016 presidential election. Norbert Hofer from the FPÖ was ahead by 14 percent in first gear, but Alexander Van der Bellen won. In the second round, not the same voters go and not the same people stay away from the polls. Many people have to make a second choice because their first choice is no longer in the running.” This means that no prediction is possible and the choice is open. It is also impossible to draw conclusions about federal policy. The city’s voters make up 1.7 percent – those from the federal state make up seven percent of all voters in Austria. “For the KPÖ, it’s all in a row.” According to Filzmaier, the results are “at most motivating within the party.” For the KPÖ it’s “point-to-point”. “The communists have had results of over 20 percent in Graz since 2003, but have never made it into the National Council. They have no driving force nationwide.” Theoretically, the KPÖ could hope to gain entry into Graz or Salzburg via a basic mandate. But it’s not just the city that counts here, but also the surrounding area – which makes it difficult.
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