Social Democratic Party of Austria

Major political party in Austria

Social Democratic Party of Austria
Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs
AbbreviationSPÖ
ChairpersonAndreas Babler
Parliamentary leaderAndreas Babler & Philip Kucher
Managing directorKlaus Seltenheim & Sandra Breiteneder
Notable deputy chairpersons
FounderVictor Adler
Founded1 January 1889; 135 years ago (1889-01-01)[1]
HeadquartersLöwelstraße 18, 1010 Vienna
Student wingSocialist Students of Austria
Youth wingJunge Generation, Socialist Youth Austria
Paramilitary wingRepublikanischer Schutzbund
(1923–1934)
Membership (2023)c. 140,000[2]
IdeologySocial democracy
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-left
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
European Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
International affiliation
Colours  Red
Anthem"Lied der Arbeit"[3]
"Song of Labour"
National Council
41 / 183
Federal Council
18 / 60
Governorships
3 / 9
State cabinets
5 / 9
State diets
132 / 440
European Parliament
5 / 19
Party flag
Flag of the Social Democratic Party of Austria
Website
spoe.at

The Social Democratic Party of Austria (German: Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs [zoˈtsi̯aːldemoˌkraːtɪʃə parˌtaɪ ˈøːstəraɪçs], SPÖ) is a social democratic[4][5][6] political party in Austria. Founded in 1889 as the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria (German: Sozialdemokratische Arbeiterpartei Österreichs, SDAPÖ) and later known as the Socialist Party of Austria (German: Sozialistische Partei Österreichs) from 1945 until 1991,[7] the party is the oldest extant political party in Austria. Along with the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), it is one of the country's two traditional major parties. It is positioned on the centre-left on the political spectrum.[8][9][10]

Since June 2023, the party has been led by Andreas Babler. It is currently the second largest of five parties in the National Council, with 40 of the 183 seats, and won 21.2% of votes cast in the 2019 legislative election. It holds seats in the legislatures of all nine states; of these, it is the largest party in three (Burgenland, Carinthia, and Vienna.) The SPÖ is supportive of Austria's membership in the European Union,[11] and it is a member of the Progressive Alliance and Party of European Socialists. It sits with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament; of Austria's 19 MEPs, five are members of the SPÖ. The party has close ties to the Austrian Trade Union Federation (ÖGB) and the Austrian Chamber of Labour (AK).

The SDAPÖ was the second largest party in the Imperial Council of the Austro-Hungarian Empire from the 1890s through 1910s. After the First World War, it briefly governed the First Austrian Republic, but thereafter returned to opposition. The party was banned in 1934 following the Austrian Civil War, and was suppressed throughout Austrofascism and the Nazi period. The party was refounded as the Socialist Party of Austria in 1945 and governed as a junior partner of the ÖVP until 1966. In 1970, the SPÖ became the largest party for the first time in post-war history, and Bruno Kreisky became Chancellor, winning three consecutive majorities (1971, 1975, and 1979). From 1987 to 2000 the SPÖ led a grand coalition with the ÖVP before returning to opposition for the first time in 30 years. The party governed again from 2007 to 2017. Since 2017, the SPÖ have been the primary opposition to the ÖVP governments of Sebastian Kurz, Alexander Schallenberg, and Karl Nehammer.

History

Since its foundation in 1889 as the SDAPÖ, the party has been one of the main political forces in Austria. At the start of the World War I, it was the strongest party in parliament. At the ending of that war in 1918, the party leader Karl Renner became Chancellor of the First Republic. The SDAPÖ lost power in 1920, but it retained a strong base of support.

After the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (1918), the Social Democratic Party supported for a time the idea of a union with Berlin in order to constitute a great democratic German republic, thus taking up a revolutionary project of 1848. The victors of the war did not see it that way and set the borders of Austria. In the interwar period, Austromarxism, maintaining its particularities in the face of German social democracy – which had bloodily suppressed the Spartacist uprising of 1919 – and Soviet communism, envisaged the creation of a new international aimed at bringing together the different currents of socialism. However, the attempt did not succeed. The more left-wing Social Democrats, such as Max Adler, relied on the Workers' councils that had developed throughout Central Europe in 1918–1919, particularly in Vienna.[12]

The SDAPÖ was the most established of the European social democratic parties. In the 1920s, about 15 percent of Austrians were members of an association linked to the party. In 1929, it had 720,000 members. The SDAPÖ was almost hegemonic among the working class, but could not compete with the conservatives in the countryside and small towns. The economic crisis of the 1930s, which caused factory closures and increased unemployment, weakened the labor movement and with it the SDAPÖ. In 1930, its membership was down to 650,000 militants.[12]

From 1919 to February 1934, the Social Democrats were in continuous control of the Vienna municipality, which acquired the nickname "Red Vienna". The municipality developed an ambitious policy, including a vast program of construction of workers' housing, which included 60,000 communal social housing units. In addition, free medical care was introduced, and income and luxury taxes were introduced. Culture was clearly emphasized: "Arbeiterbildung" (working-class education and culture) reigned supreme, and the city was home to many internationally renowned intellectuals and artists. Numerous cinemas and theaters subsidized by the municipality opened their doors, and sports became more democratic. This socialist experiment, supported by some renowned intellectuals such as Otto Neurath and Sigmund Freud, also inspired a violent disgust in conservative circles. The press readily described red Vienna as a "Jewish creation" in the hands of "Bolshevism".[12]

Party membership of SPÖ over time, since 1945. The peak was reached in 1970s. Since 1986 the party is rapidly declining.

In 1934, the Christian Social Party, the dominant party on the right, overthrew the democratic system and established a regime inspired by fascism. The social democrats and communists put up armed resistance, but it was quickly crushed.[12]

When Anschluss took place in 1938 at the hands of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany, he brought Austria into the Second World War. In 1945, the party was reconstituted as the Socialist Party of Austria (German: Sozialistische Partei Österreichs, SPÖ) and was led by Adolf Schärf. The SPÖ entered the government of the Second Republic as part of a grand coalition with the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) until 1966 and with the Communist Party of Austria until 1949. Renner became the first President of Austria.

From 1971 to 1983, the SPÖ under Bruno Kreisky was the sole governing party. For the following three years, it ruled in coalition with the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), then up to 2000 it was again part of a grand coalition with the ÖVP, with Franz Vranitzky as Chancellor until 1997. In 1991, it reverted to including Democratic in its name, becoming the Social Democratic Party of Austria (German: Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs). During this period, the grand coalition combined with the Proporz system, whereby important posts throughout the government were shared out between members of the two main parties, evoked rising discontent. This was a factor in the growing popularity of the FPÖ which came second to the SPÖ in the 1999 Austrian legislative election. The following year, the FPÖ and ÖVP formed a right-wing coalition, displacing the SPÖ from a share in government. While this coalition was still in power, the SPÖ's Heinz Fischer was elected president in the 2004 Austrian presidential election. Following the 2006 Austrian legislative election, another grand coalition was formed between the SPÖ and the ÖVP, lasting until 2017, when the SPÖ went back to the opposition. In the 2019 Austrian legislative election, the SPÖ lost 12 seats and shrunk to 21.2%.

After the lost state elections in Lower Austria and Carinthia at the beginning of 2023, there was a power struggle between the moderate social democratic party wing around party leader Pamela Rendi-Wagner and the right-wing, FPÖ-friendly party wing around Burgenland governor Hans Peter Doskozil. The Social Democratic wing has support from socialists and communists. The right wing has support from the middle wing of the party. Disputes and disagreements have existed for years. In March 2023, the situation came to a head after the SPÖ Burgenland stopped paying money to the federal party. On 15 March 2023, a heated party executive meeting led to the call for a new party leadership election. The candidacy for the new leadership was heated and a surprise candidacy from Andreas Babler, mayor of Traiskirchen, which has led to some other candidates to withdraw their candidacy for the 2023 Social Democratic Party of Austria leadership election.[13][14][15]

At the 2024 Austrian legislative election the Social Democratic Party (SPÖ) won just 21.1%, marking its worst result ever in the National Council.

Dealing with the past from 1938-1945

Concerning the role of the SDAPÖ during Nazi rule from 1938 to 1945, the party started opening its archives and set in a commission to investigate its past conduct. Despite the fact the SDAPÖ had been outlawed and many party members imprisoned under Austrofascism, many SDAPÖ members initially welcomed the Anschluss of Austria into Germany back then and some became members of the Nazi Party. Alfred Gusenbauer issued a declaration promising and supporting a full and open investigation ("Klarheit in der Vergangenheit – Basis für die Zukunft"). In 2005, the report about the so-called "brown spots" (German: braune Flecken) was completed and published. The report talks about SDAPÖ members and leaders who became members of the Nazi Party during German rule after the Anschluss. One example given in the report is the case of Heinrich Gross, who received many honours from the party and even the government in the post-war period. This was despite the fact that he worked as a Nazi doctor in the euthanasia ward Am Spiegelgrund in Vienna, where human experiments on children were performed. Those children with presumptive mental defects were eventually killed, often by lethal injection. Gross was probably himself involved in the experimentations and killings. The Austrian judicial system protected him for a very long time from any kind of prosecution, something that was very typical in the post-war period. He enjoyed wide support from the SPÖ and party leaders for a very long time.

Reflecting the change in attitude towards the past, President Heinz Fischer in a 10 April 2006 interview with the liberal newspaper Der Standard strongly criticised Austria's view on its historical role during Nazi rule. He called the traditional view that Austria was the first victim of Nazi aggression as false. The Moscow Declaration of 1943 by émigrés which called for the independence of Austria from Nazi Germany was a problem since it stated that the war was neither started nor wanted by any Austrian ("Und das ist nicht richtig"), that Austrian Jewish victims were not mentioned in the declaration ("kein Wort für die jüdischen Opfer"), that it took decades for them to receive any kind of compensation and justice from the government and that it was regrettable and inexcusable. His statements were direct criticism of the right-wing government of the coalition ÖVP–FPÖ which rejected compensation to victims and the admission of the co-guilt Austrians carried for crimes committed by them during the Second World War.

Election results by states

Burgenland

Burgenland is a state that is a traditional stronghold of the SPÖ. Since 1964, the governors of this easternmost state have come from the SPÖ. Burgenland is one of the few states that are ruled by a SPÖ majority in the state assembly (Landtag). In 2000, the SPÖ received 46.6%. In 2005, it received 5.2% more votes and ended up with an absolute majority of 51.8%. After losing it in 2010, the SPÖ was able to regain it in the latest election in January 2020. From 2015 to 2020, the SPÖ in Burgenland was in an unusual coalition with the FPÖ. The Governor (Landeshauptmann) of the Burgenland is Hans Peter Doskozil.

Carinthia

The SPÖ used to be strong in Carinthia as it regularly won the most seats in state elections and the governors used to be Social Democrats until 1989. Since the rise of Jörg Haider and his FPÖ, he successfully pushed the SPÖ out of their leading position. In state elections in 1999, the SPÖ received 32.9%. However, this went up to 38.4% in 2004. Until 2005, the SPÖ was in a coalition with the right-wing FPÖ in Carinthia, where Haider was Governor. This constellation is in question after the chairperson of the Carinthian SPÖ Gabi Schauning decided to resign from her post as Vice-Governor of Carinthia after a fall-out with Haider. Carinthia has a mandatory concentration government, where each party with a certain number of seats in the state parliament automatically participates in the state government. The term coalition refers to the co-operation between parties and not to the participation in the state cabinet.

Lower Austria

In Lower Austria, the SPÖ received 29.2% in 1998. It increased its shares by 3.2% in 2003 and ended up with 32.4%. In the 2008 Lower Austrian state election, the SPÖ received 25.5% of the vote.

Salzburg

In 2004, the SPÖ won a surprising victory in Salzburg. It was able to increase its share of votes from 32.2% (1999) to 45.3%. For the first time, the conservative ÖVP lost its traditional dominant position. Gabi Burgstaller became the first SPÖ governess (Landeshauptfrau) in the state's history. In March 2009, the party lost 2 seats (from 17 to 15) with a 39.5% of the popular votes, going to the FPÖ (from 3 to 5) with a 13% of the votes. The ÖVP had 14 seats with a 36.5% of the votes and the Grüne 2 seat with a 7.3% . The BZÖ had no seat with a 3.7% of the votes, showing a growing of the right-wing parties. In the State elections 2013 the SPÖ lost its majority to the ÖVP. Since then, the ÖVP has providing the governor (Landeshauptmann) with Wilfried Haslauer jun. again.

Styria

Styria was traditionally ruled by the ÖVP. In 2000, the Styrian SPÖ ended up with 32.3%. In 2005, the voters shifted towards the left, something that also benefited the KPÖ, the local communist party. The SPÖ won 9.4% more and ended up with 40.7%, defeating the ÖVP which got 38.7% of the votes. Styrian SPÖ Chairman Franz Voves became the state Governor. After the State elections 2015 the SPÖ lost the governorship to the ÖVP. Since then, the ÖVP has providing the governor (Landeshauptmann) with Hermann Schützenhöfer again.

Tyrol

In Tyrol, the SPÖ receive few votes since the state is a traditional conservative stronghold. In 2018, the Tyrolean SPÖ received 17.3% of all votes. The winner of the election was the ÖVP under long-term governor Günther Platter, which received 44,3% of the total vote.

Upper Austria

In 2003, the SPÖ was able to raise its voters share in Upper Austria by 11.3% from 27% (1997) to 38.3%. It was in a grand coalition with the ÖVP in the state government as the junior partner, with four out of nine of the state government ministers coming from the SPÖ.

Vienna

Vienna was always traditionally the stronghold of the SPÖ. The current Governor-Mayor of Vienna is Michael Ludwig. In the 2020 Viennese state election the SPÖ raised its vote-share to 41,6%. The party with the largest gains was the ÖVP which doubled its vote-share and won 20,4% of the votes.

Vorarlberg

Vorarlberg is a traditional stronghold of the conservative ÖVP. Of all the Austrian states, the SPÖ receives the fewest votes in this westernmost state. In the 2019 the SPÖ ended up with 9,5% of the vote, a raise of 0,7%. The winner of the election was the conservative ÖVP under governor Markus Wallner which won around 45%.

Organization

Chairpersons since 1945

The chart below shows a timeline of the social-democratic chairpersons and the Chancellors of Austria since 1945. The left bar shows all the chairpersons (Bundesparteivorsitzende, abbreviated as CP) of the SPÖ, 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.

Karl NehammerAlexander SchallenbergSecond Kurz governmentBierlein governmentFirst Kurz governmentKern governmentSecond Faymann governmentFirst Faymann governmentGusenbauer governmentSecond Schüssel governmentWolfgang SchüsselViktor KlimaFranz VranitzkyFred SinowatzBruno KreiskyJosef KlausAlfons GorbachJulius RaabLeopold FiglKarl RennerAndreas BablerPamela Rendi-WagnerChristian KernWerner FaymannAlfred GusenbauerViktor KlimaFranz VranitzkyFred SinowatzBruno KreiskyBruno PittermannAdolf Schärf

Select list of other SPÖ politicians

Youth factions

After the founding of the SDAPÖ in 1889, a youth organization was established on 4 November 1894, with the purpose of protecting apprentices and addressing the concerns of young people within the party. Despite initial resistance from some SDAPÖ members, an independent socialist youth movement emerged. Today, this organization is known as the Socialist Youth Austria (SJÖ). The SJÖ notably chose not to change its name to "social-democratic" when the SPÖ rebranded itself in 1991, highlighting its independence both programmatically – as the SJÖ remains democratic socialist rather than social-democratic like the SPÖ – and organizationally. This autonomy has often led to tensions between the SJÖ and the SPÖ, including instances where the party reduced the SJÖ's funding.[16] To address these issues, the SPÖ established a youth organization called the Young Generation (JG) on 22 January 1958.[17]

The creation of the JG was not only a response to the disappointing results in the 1956 national elections, particularly among young voters, but also an effort to manage the increasingly strained relationship with the SJÖ.[18] Over time, the JG has evolved into a parallel structure, closely aligned with the SPÖ and more in line with the party's objectives than the SJÖ.

Many influential politicians have emerged from the ranks of the SJÖ, including figures like Bruno Kreisky and Andreas Babler, who have significantly shaped the party's direction. However, the SJÖ is not the only youth organization that has produced notable leaders; the JG has also been a breeding ground for politicians who have gone on to make their mark on the SPÖ.

The SJÖ also has factions within its organization, such as the Trotskyist "Der Funke" (IMT) faction, which was active in the now-dissolved SJ9 (Alsergrund district)[19] and continues to be present in SJ Vorarlberg.[20] As a result of these events, tensions between all parties involved continue to this day.

Election results

Imperial Council

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–Government
1891Victor Adler3,8481.26 (#12)
0 / 353
NewExtra-parliamentary
1897245,00123.13 (#2)
14 / 425
Increase 14Opposition
1900–1901251,65223.39 (#2)
12 / 425
Decrease 2Opposition
1907513,21911.11 (#2)
50 / 516
Increase 38Opposition
1911542,54911.96 (#2)
46 / 516
Decrease 4Opposition

Constituent National Assembly

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–Government
1919Karl Seitz1,211,81440.76 (#1)
72 / 170
Increase 72SDAPÖ–CS majority

National Council

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–Government
1920Karl Seitz1,072,70935.99 (#2)
69 / 183
Decrease 3Opposition
19231,311,87039.60 (#2)
68 / 165
Decrease 1Opposition
19271,539,63542.28 (#2)
71 / 165
Increase 3Opposition
19301,517,14641.14 (#1)
72 / 165
Increase 1Opposition
1945Adolf Schärf1,434,89844.60 (#2)
76 / 165
Increase 4ÖVP–SPÖ–KPÖ majority
19491,623,52438.71 (#2)
67 / 165
Decrease 9ÖVP–SPÖ majority
19531,818,51742.11 (#1)
73 / 165
Increase 6ÖVP–SPÖ majority
19561,873,29543.05 (#2)
74 / 165
Increase 1ÖVP–SPÖ majority
1959Bruno Pittermann1,953,93544.79 (#1)
78 / 165
Increase 4ÖVP–SPÖ majority
19621,960,68544.00 (#2)
76 / 165
Decrease 2ÖVP–SPÖ majority
19661,928,98542.56 (#2)
74 / 165
Decrease 2Opposition
1970Bruno Kreisky2,221,98148.42 (#1)
81 / 165
Increase 7SPÖ minority supported by FPÖ
19712,280,16850.04 (#1)
93 / 183
Increase 12SPÖ majority
19752,326,20150.42 (#1)
93 / 183
Steady 0SPÖ majority
19792,413,22651.03 (#1)
95 / 183
Increase 2SPÖ majority
19832,312,52947.65 (#1)
90 / 183
Decrease 5SPÖ–FPÖ majority
1986Franz Vranitzky2,092,02443.12 (#1)
80 / 183
Decrease 10SPÖ–ÖVP majority
19902,012,78742.78 (#1)
80 / 183
Steady 0SPÖ–ÖVP majority
19941,617,80434.92 (#1)
65 / 183
Decrease 15SPÖ–ÖVP majority
19951,843,47438.06 (#1)
71 / 183
Increase 6SPÖ–ÖVP majority
1999Viktor Klima1,532,44833.15 (#1)
65 / 183
Decrease 6Opposition
2002Alfred Gusenbauer1,792,49936.51 (#2)
69 / 183
Increase 4Opposition
20061,663,98635.34 (#1)
68 / 183
Decrease 1SPÖ–ÖVP majority
2008Werner Faymann1,430,20629.26 (#1)
57 / 183
Decrease 9SPÖ–ÖVP majority
20131,258,60526.82 (#1)
52 / 183
Decrease 5SPÖ–ÖVP majority
2017Christian Kern1,351,91826.86 (#2)
52 / 183
SteadyOpposition
2019Pamela Rendi-Wagner1,011,86821.18 (#2)
40 / 183
Decrease 12Opposition
2024Andreas Babler1,032,23421.14 (#3)
41 / 183
Increase 1TBA

Presidency

ElectionCandidateFirst round resultSecond round result
Votes%ResultVotes%Result
1951Theodor Körner1,682,88139.1Runner-up2,178,63152.1Won
1957Adolf Schärf2,258,25551.1Won
1963Adolf Schärf2,473,34955.4Won
1965Franz Jonas2,324,43650.7Won
1971Franz Jonas2,487,23952.8Won
1974Rudolf Kirchschläger2,392,36751.7Won
1980Rudolf Kirchschläger3,538,74879.9Won
1986Kurt Steyrer2,061,10443.7Runner-up2,107,02346.1Lost
1992Rudolf Streicher1,888,59940.7Runner-up1,915,38041.1Lost
1998No candidate
2004Heinz Fischer2,166,69052.4Won
2010Heinz Fischer2,508,37379.3Won
2016Rudolf Hundstorfer482,79011.34th place
2022No candidate

European Parliament

ElectionList leaderVotes%Seats+/–EP Group
1996Hannes Swoboda1,105,91029.15 (#2)
6 / 21
NewPES
1999Hans-Peter Martin888,33831.71 (#1)
7 / 21
Increase 1
2004Hannes Swoboda833,51733.33 (#1)
7 / 18
Steady 0
2009680,04123.74 (#2)
4 / 17
Decrease 3S&D
2014Eugen Freund680,18024.09 (#2)
5 / 18
Increase 1
2019Andreas Schieder903,15123.89 (#2)
5 / 18
Steady 0
2024818,28723.22 (#3)
5 / 20
Steady 0
StateYearVotes%Seats±Government
Burgenland202092,63349.9 (#1)
19 / 36
Increase 4SPÖ majority
Carinthia2023117,96238.9 (#1)
15 / 36
Decrease 3SPÖ–ÖVP
Lower Austria2023185,76020.1 (#3)
12 / 56
Decrease 1Opposition
Salzburg202348,09917.9 (#3)
7 / 36
Decrease 1Opposition
Styria2019138,57223.0 (#2)
12 / 48
Decrease 3ÖVP–SPÖ
Tyrol202260,00917.5 (#3)
7 / 36
Increase 1ÖVP–SPÖ
Upper Austria2021150,09418.6 (#3)
11 / 56
Steady 0Opposition
Vienna2020301,96741.6 (#1)
46 / 100
Increase 2SPÖ–NEOS
Vorarlberg201915,6359.5 (#4)
4 / 36
Increase 1Opposition

Results timeline

YearAustria
AT
European Union
EU
Burgenland
Bgld
Carinthia
Ktn
Lower Austria
Salzburg (state)
Sbg
Styria
Stmk
Tyrol (federal state)
Tyrol
Upper Austria
Vienna
Wien
Vorarlberg
Vbg
194544.6N/A44.948.840.439.541.628.038.357.227.2
1946   ProporzProporzProporzProporzProporzProporz     
1947
1948
1949Decrease 38.7Decrease 40.4Decrease 40.8Decrease 37.4Decrease 33.6Decrease 37.4Decrease 24.0Decrease 30.8Decrease 49.9Decrease 19.1
1950  ProporzProporzProporzProporzProporzProporz     
1951
1952
1953Increase 42.1Increase 44.7Increase 48.2Increase 41.1Increase 27.4
1954  ProporzIncrease 41.0Increase 38.2ProporzProporzIncrease 52.7Increase 26.0
1955ProporzProporzIncrease 39.4     
1956Increase 43.0Increase 46.0Decrease 48.1Proporz
1957  ProporzIncrease 43.6Increase 31.0
1958ProporzProporz
1959Increase 44.8Increase 42.3Increase 38.6Increase 54.4Increase 29.3
1960  Increase 46.2Increase 48.5ProporzProporz     
1961ProporzDecrease 41.7Decrease 30.1Increase 39.6
1962Decrease 44.0ProporzProporzProporz
1963  
1964Increase 48.2Increase 42.8Increase 40.9Increase 54.7Increase 29.5
1965Increase 49.2ProporzProporzIncrease 42.2Increase 30.5     
1966Decrease 42.6ProporzProporz
1967Increase 46.0
1968Increase 50.3Proporz
1969Increase 44.6Decrease 40.4Increase 56.9Decrease 27.7
1970Increase 48.4
 
Increase 53.1ProporzProporzIncrease 44.7Increase 33.5     
1971Increase 50.0ProporzProporz
1972 Increase 50.5
1973Decrease 43.4Increase 60.1
1974Decrease 43.9Decrease 36.2Decrease 41.2Proporz Decrease 27.6
1975Increase 50.4Decrease 51.4ProporzProporzProporzDecrease 32.4
1976 Proporz
1977Increase 52.0
1978Decrease 40.3Decrease 57.2
1979Increase 51.0Increase 54.0Increase 45.4Increase 39.1ProporzDecrease 29.3Decrease 41.4 Increase 29.0
1980 ProporzProporzProporzProporz
1981Increase 42.7
1982Increase 53.2Proporz
1983Decrease 47.7Decrease 41.4Decrease 55.5
1984  Decrease 51.7ProporzDecrease 35.1Decrease 25.2 Decrease 24.0
1985ProporzProporzDecrease 38.0
1986Decrease 43.1Decrease 37.6Proporz
1987  Decrease 47.3ProporzDecrease 54.9
1988Decrease 37.3 
1989Decrease 46.0ProporzDecrease 31.3Decrease 22.8Decrease 21.3
1990Decrease 42.8ProporzProporzProporz
1991  Increase 48.1Decrease 34.9Decrease 31.4Decrease 47.8
1992ProporzProporz 
1993Decrease 33.9
1994Decrease 34.9
  
Decrease 37.4ProporzDecrease 27.1Decrease 19.8Decrease 16.2
1995Increase 38.1ProporzProporzIncrease 35.9Proporz
1996  29.2Decrease 44.5ProporzDecrease 39.2
1997Decrease 27.0  
1998Decrease 30.4Proporz
1999Decrease 33.2Increase 31.7Decrease 32.9ProporzIncrease 32.3Increase 21.8Decrease 13.0
2000Increase 46.6Proporz  Decrease 32.3  
2001ProporzIncrease 46.9
2002Increase 36.5 
2003Increase 33.6Increase 25.9Increase 38.3
2004Increase 33.3Increase 38.4ProporzIncrease 45.4  ProporzIncrease 16.9
2005Increase 52.2Proporz  Increase 41.7Increase 49.1
2006Decrease 35.3 
2007  
2008Decrease 29.3Decrease 25.5Decrease 15.5
2009  Decrease 23.7Decrease 28.7ProporzDecrease 39.4  Decrease 24.9Decrease 10.0
2010Decrease 48.3Proporz  Decrease 38.3ProporzDecrease 44.3
2011  
2012
2013Decrease 26.8Increase 37.1Decrease 21.6Decrease 23.8Decrease 13.7
2014  Increase 24.1ProporzDecrease 8.8
2015Decrease 41.9Decrease 29.3Decrease 18.4Decrease 39.6
2016    Proporz  
2017Increase 26.9
2018Increase 47.9Increase 23.9Decrease 20.0Increase 17.3
2019Decrease 21.2Decrease 23.9  ProporzDecrease 23.0Increase 9.5
2020Increase 49.9  Increase 41.6
2021 Increase 18.6  
2022Increase 17.5Proporz
2023Decrease 38.9Decrease 20.7Decrease 17.9  
2024Decrease 21.1Decrease 23.2  Proporz
YearAustria
AT
European Union
EU
Burgenland
Bgld
Carinthia
Ktn
Lower Austria
Salzburg (state)
Sbg
Styria
Stmk
Tyrol (federal state)
Tyrol
Upper Austria
Vienna
Wien
Vorarlberg
Vbg
Bold indicates best result to date.
  Present in legislature (in opposition)
  Junior coalition partner
  Senior coalition partner

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs". ParlGov Database. Holger Döring and Philip Manow. Archived from the original on 5 November 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  2. ^ Schiretz, Vilja. "Mitgliederbefragung - Die rote Basis als große Unbekannte". Österreich Politik - Nachrichten - Wiener Zeitung Online.
  3. ^ Hochman, Erin R. (2016). Imagining a Greater Germany: Republican Nationalism and the Idea of Anschluss. Cornell University Press. p. 115. ISBN 9781501706066.
  4. ^ Dimitri Almeida (27 April 2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  5. ^ "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  6. ^ Bale, Tim (2021). Riding the populist wave: Europe's mainstream right in crisis. Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-009-00686-6. OCLC 1256593260.
  7. ^ Encyclopaedia Britannica. "Austria: Transport and telecommunications - history - geography". Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  8. ^ Connolly, Kate; Oltermann, Philip; Henley, Jon (23 May 2016). "Austria elects Green candidate as president in narrow defeat for far right". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  9. ^ "The Latest: Election tally shows Austria turning right". The Washington Times. Associated Press. 15 October 2017. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  10. ^ Oliphant, Roland; Csekö, Balazs (5 December 2016). "Austrian far-right defiant as Freedom Party claims 'pole position' for general election: 'Our time comes'". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  11. ^ "SPOE Partei Programm" (PDF) (in German). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2012. (458 KiB) Party platform, see articles I.(1) and III.7.(1): "strive for a society that overcomes class antagonisms", "only the advancement of political to economic, and therefore social, democracy establishes the precondition for the realization of our basic principles".[dead link]
  12. ^ a b c d Rabinbach, Anson. The Austrian socialist experiment : social democracy and austromarxism, 1918-1934. Boulder: Westview Press
  13. ^ "SPÖ-Mitgliederbefragung: Kein Duell, sondern mehrere Kandidaten" (in German). 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  14. ^ "Fünf Thesen, wie Bablers Antreten und ein Gerücht über Kern den SPÖ-Führungsstreit durcheinanderwirbeln". 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  15. ^ "Nikolaus Kowall will doch nicht als SPÖ-Chef kandidieren". 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  16. ^ Hagen, Lara; Rachbauer, Stefanie (18 October 2023). "Sozialistische Jugend Vorarlberg sorgt mit Gaza-Posting für Kritik". derStandart.at (in German). Retrieved 18 August 2024. Er werde einen Landesparteivorstand einberufen und alle weiteren Schritte von Einstellung der Förderungen für die Sozialistische Jugend bis hin zu Parteiausschlüssen diskutieren. [He would convene a state party executive committee to discuss all further steps, including the suspension of funding for the Socialist Youth and possible party expulsions.]
  17. ^ "Junge Generation in der SPÖ (JG)". dasrotewien.at (in German). SPÖ Wien. Retrieved 18 August 2024.
  18. ^ "Sozialistische Jugend (SJ)". dasrotewien.at (in German). SPÖ Wien. Retrieved 18 August 2024.
  19. ^ Al Kafur, Miriam. "Sozialistische Jugend Alsergrund aufgelöst" [The Socialist Youth Alsergrund has been dissolved]. Meinbezirk.at (in German). Retrieved 18 August 2024.
  20. ^ "SJ Vorarlberg". derfunke.at (in German).

Literature

  • Gordon Brook-Shepherd. The Austrians. HarperCollins Publishers Ltd. London, 1995. ISBN 3-552-04876-6.
  • Caspar Einem, Wolfgang Neugebauer, Andreas Schwarz. Der Wille zum aufrechten Gang. Czernin Verlag, Vienna, 2005. ISBN 3-7076-0196-X (discussion on book is available online on hagalil.com).
  • Maria Mesner (Ed.). Entnazifizierung zwischen politischem Anspruch, Parteienkonkurrenz und Kaltem Krieg: Das Beispiel der SPÖ. Oldenbourg Verlag, Vienna, 2005. ISBN 3-486-57815-4.
  • Bruno Kreisky, Matthew Paul Berg (Translator), Jill Lewis (Ed.).The Struggle for a Democratic Austria: Bruno Kreisky on Peace and Social Justice. Berghahn Books, New York, 2000. ISBN 1-57181-155-9.
  • Barbara Kaindl-Widhalm. Demokraten wider Willen? Autoritäre Tendenzen und Antisemitismus in der 2. Republik. Verlag für Gesellschaftskritik, Vienna, 1990.
  • Norbert Leser: Zwischen Reformismus und Bolschewismus. Der Austromarxismus in Theorie und Praxis, 1968.
  • Wolfgang Neugebauer. Widerstand und Opposition, in: NS-Herrschaft in Österreich. öbv und hpt, Vienna, 2000. ISBN 3-209-03179-7.
  • Peter Pelinka. Eine kurze Geschichte der SPÖ. Ereignisse, Persönlichkeiten, Jahreszahlen. Ueberreuter, Vienna, 2005. ISBN 3-8000-7113-4.
  • Official website (in German)
  • The Social Democratic Party of Austria
  • Linzer Programm (3 November 1926) (in German)
  • Otto Bauer – Austromarxism (in German)
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