Austria’s far-right 'rising star' quits politics amidst corruption probe

Former Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz has announced resignation from all political duties two months after coming under criminal investigation.

Kurz has been the dominant and most polarising figure of Austrian politics since 2017.
Reuters

Kurz has been the dominant and most polarising figure of Austrian politics since 2017.

Austria's former chancellor Sebastian Kurz has said that he is quitting politics, two months after stepping down as leader amid corruption allegations.

The 35-year-old told reporters in Vienna on Thursday that he had always done his best to "move our beautiful Austria a little bit in the right direction,” but acknowledged having made some mistakes during his 10-year career.

Still, Kurz insisted: “I'm neither a saint, nor a criminal.”

Kurz, who was one of Europe's youngest leaders, quit as chancellor in October at the behest of his coalition partner, the Greens, after prosecutors launched the graft inquiry, though he remained head of his People's Party (OVP) and a lawmaker.

He has been the dominant and most polarising figure of Austrian politics since 2017 when he became OVP leader and then chancellor, winning a parliamentary election and forming a coalition with the far-right Freedom Party (FPO).

Kurz said he had felt "hunted" because of hefty criticism during his time as chancellor.

He has most recently come under fire for not doing more to prevent the latest wave of Covid-19 infections, which prompted the current national lockdown. 

READ MORE: Austria's Sebastian Kurz is out, but his right-wing policies remain

Scandals

He led his party in two parliamentary elections in 2017 and 2019, becoming chancellor after both.

But his time in government was mired in scandals including the graft investigation and his dismissal by parliament in 2019 after a video sting ensnared the then-leader of the FPO and their coalition collapsed.

Many conservatives believed Kurz's successor as chancellor, career diplomat Alexander Schallenberg, was merely a place-holder until Kurz could clear his name and return.

Until October Kurz was widely expected to remain chancellor for years.

His OVP is one of the main traditional parties in Austria but under Kurz it has largely been built around him, leaving no obvious choice to succeed him as its strongman.

Kurz said the OVP leadership would meet on Friday but did not endorse anyone to succeed him. Various Austrian media said Interior Minister Karl Nehammer is the best-placed candidate.

A new OVP leader could also lead to a cabinet reshuffle, as party statutes say the leader can pick the party's ministers. The OVP is in coalition with the left-wing Greens and controls most ministries including foreign affairs and finance.

READ MORE: Austria's Kurz steps down as chancellor amid graft claims

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