Austrian conservative Kurz plans coalition talks with far right

Reuters

Published Oct 24, 2017 05:31AM ET

Austrian conservative Kurz plans coalition talks with far right

VIENNA (Reuters) - Austrian conservative leader Sebastian Kurz plans to hold coalition talks with the far-right Freedom Party (FPO), he said on Tuesday, a step towards bringing the anti-immigration party back into government after more than a decade in opposition.

Having won last week's parliamentary election with 31.5 percent of the vote, Kurz's party is well short of a majority and needs a partner to gain control of parliament and form a stable government. Only two parties have enough seats to do that with -- the Social Democrats (SPO) and the FPO.

"I have therefore decided to invite (FPO leader) Heinz-Christian Strache and the FPO today to take part in coalition talks," Kurz told a news conference at the headquarters of his People's Party (OVP), adding that a minority government was a "good Plan B" if those talks failed.

Some European leaders have expressed concern about the possible return to power of the FPO, which was founded in the 1950s by ex-Nazis. The party has steadily increased its mainstream appeal in recent years, expelling members for anti-Semitic statements and even dropping calls for Austria to leave the European Union.

Kurz, who took a hard line on immigration during the campaign that overlapped heavily with the FPO's, has sought to allay such concerns and repeated that any government must have a "clear pro-European orientation".