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Austrian legislative election, 2008

Austrian legislative election, 2008
Austria
← 2006 28 September 2008 2013 →

All 183 seats in the National Council
92 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 4,990,952 (78.8%)
  First party Second party Third party
  Werner Faymann Wien08-2008a.jpg Wilhelm Molterer 20080908h.jpg Strache8.jpg
Leader Werner Faymann Wilhelm Molterer Heinz-Christian Strache
Party SPÖ ÖVP FPÖ
Leader since 2008 2007 2005
Leader's seat 9 Vienna 4D Traunviertel 9D Vienna South
Last election 68 seats, 35.34% 66 seats, 34.33% 21 seats, 11.04%
Seats won 57 51 34
Seat change Decrease 11 Decrease 15 Increase 13
Popular vote 1,430,206 1,269,656 857,029
Percentage 29.26% 25.98% 17.54%
Swing Decrease 6.08% Decrease 8.35% Increase 6.50%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Jörg Haider 28082008.jpg Alexander Van der Bellen1.jpg Heide Schmidt Wien2008.jpg
Leader Jörg Haider Alexander Van der Bellen Heide Schmidt
Party BZÖ Greens LiF
Leader since 2008 1997 2008
Leader's seat 2A Klagenfurt 9F Vienna North-West 9F Vienna North-West
Last election 7 seats, 4.11% 21 seats, 11.05% did not contest on their own
Seats won 21 20 0
Seat change Increase 14 Decrease 1 Steady 0
Popular vote 522,933 509,936 102,249
Percentage 10.70% 10.43% 2.09%
Swing Increase 6.59% Decrease 0.62% Increase 2.09%

Austrian legislative election 2008 result by district.png
Party results by districts

Chancellor before election

Alfred Gusenbauer
SPÖ

Elected Chancellor

Werner Faymann
SPÖ


Alfred Gusenbauer
SPÖ

Werner Faymann
SPÖ

A legislative snap election for the National Council in Austria was held on 28 September 2008. The previous election was held on 1 October 2006. The election (the 24th in Austrian history) was caused by the withdrawal of Austrian People's Party leader Wilhelm Molterer from the governing grand coalition (led by the Social Democratic Party of Austria) on 7 July 2008. Due to dissatisfaction with the grand coalition and the two main parties, it was widely expected to be a realigning election, with gains for the opposition and up to seven parties expected to be in the National Council after the election. The losses for the government parties (both the SPÖ and the ÖVP had the worst election result in history) resulted in strong gains for the far right, while neither the Liberal Forum nor the Citizens' Forum Austria (both of which were considered to have chances of gaining seats) gained as much as 2% of the vote, defying earlier expectations. The result of the election was seen as strong for the far-right and in support of Eurosceptics.

Molterer resigned as party chairman as a result of the losses suffered by the ÖVP and was replaced by environment minister Josef Pröll; the Greens' federal spokesman Alexander Van der Bellen (in office since 1997) also resigned and was replaced by his deputy, Eva Glawischnig. Due to the LIF's failure to enter parliament on its own, LIF founder Heide Schmidt and financier Hans-Peter Haselsteiner both declared their complete withdrawal from politics, and the LIF's fate was seen as uncertain. Shortly after the election, BZÖ leader and Carinthian governor Jörg Haider died in a car accident.


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