SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

POLITICS

2024 EU elections: What you need to know as an Austrian resident

The year 2024 brings the much anticipated EU elections. Who gets to vote, why does the election matter and more of the important questions for Austrian residents.

2024 EU elections: What you need to know as an Austrian resident
The European Parliament in Brussels, on February 21, 2024, ahead of the European elections scheduled between June 6 and June 9, 2024. Photo: Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD/AFP.

Across Europe, people will go to the polls in early June to select their representatives in the European Parliament, with 20 seats up for grabs in Austria. 

When is the vote taking place?

Polling takes place across Austria on Sunday, June 9th.

Polling stations will generally be set up in the same places as national and local elections – usually town halls, schools and other public buildings.

Voters can choose between postal voting or physically attending an assigned polling station. A ballot card is sent to all eligible voters in the post ahead of the election.

READ ALSO: Austria’s ‘super-election year’: What will be decided and when?

Who can vote?

In EU parliamentary elections, nationals of all EU countries who reside in Austria can both vote in the elections and run for office.

Nationals of non-EU countries cannot vote or run in these elections.

To be eligible to vote and run in the EU elections, you must either be eligible to vote in the Austrian general elections or be an EU national who resides in Austria. You must be 18 years old or older.

Foreign-based Austrians can also vote in EU elections in Austria if they live in another EU country (but not a non-EU country).

READ ALSO: The five numbers you need to understand the EU

How does the election work?

The system for European elections differs from most countries’ domestic polls.

MEPs are elected once every five years. Each country is allocated an MEP roughly based on its population size.

At present, there are 705 MEPs. Germany—the country in the bloc with the largest population—has the most, while Malta has the smallest number, just six.

At the last elections in 2019, France had 74 MEPs, but it has since gained an extra 5, bringing it to 79. This is partly due to the UK’s exit from the EU and some of its 73 European Parliament seats being shared among other countries.

In the run-up to the election, the Austrian political parties decide on who will be their Spitzenkandidaten (candidates heading the list) for the European parliament. These people have a high chance of being elected. The further down the list a name appears, the less likely that person is to be heading to parliament.

The Spitzenkandidaten are generally responsible for running that party’s election campaign and becoming their spokesperson on European issues. 

Once in parliament, parties usually seek to maximise their influence by joining one of the ‘blocks’, which are made up of parties from neighbouring countries that broadly share their interests and values, such as centre-left, far-right, or green.

The parliament alternates between Strasbourg and Brussels.

Why does the European Parliament matter?

Plenty of high-relevance issues—like national defence and healthcare—are still primarily decided by national parliaments. That’s likely to remain so, but the European Parliament has the power to act in a few key areas.  

It scrutinises all laws the EU’s executive—or the European Commission—proposes and can also request legislation. Plenty of recent high-profile EU laws have come at its insistence. These include the end of roaming charges in the EU and GDPR, which now sets data privacy standards around the globe.

In addition to regulations on tech and artificial intelligence, expect MEPs to debate a lot of legislation around consumer protection, food safety, certain actions on climate change and transition like the European Green Deal, trade deals, and Europe’s support for Ukraine and whether it will eventually become a member of the EU.

Since Austria is heading for a general election later this year, the EU vote and the campaigns will also serve as an important thermometer ahead of the National Council vote in autumn.

READ ALSO: What issues do Austrians care about the most?

How are the elections expected to go?

Polls show the far-right FPÖ has a sizeable lead for the European elections in Austria – and jumped to 27 percent of voting intentions from the 17.2 percent they got last time. 

This is in line with the populist right rise in Europe, where polls everywhere from Sweden to France and the Netherlands show right-wing parties having the potential to make some significant gains over their 2019 results.

READ ALSO: ‘Wake-up call’: Far-right parties set to make considerable gains in 2024 EU elections

In 2019, the centre-right ÖVP got the most votes, ensuring seven seats in the EU Parliament. They were followed by the centre-left SPÖ, with five seats, then the FPÖ and the Greens, each with three, and the liberal NEOS, with one seat.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

POLITICS

How Austria’s centre-left SPÖ party plans to change integration policy

Asylum, migration, and integration policies are a much-debated issue in Austria, particularly as the country heads to its national elections in the fall. What are the centre-left SPÖ plans?

How Austria's centre-left SPÖ party plans to change integration policy

National elections in Austria will take place this fall, and one of the most debated issues – certainly one that has been driving voters for the past few years – is the refugee and asylum policy debates. 

While the far-right party FPÖ has gained popularity with extremist views such as closing off Austria entirely for asylum seekers, the centre-right ÖVP has also presented tougher stances. The chancellor’s party has publicly defended the creation of “asylum centres” for processing outside of the EU borders. Chancellor Karl Nehammer has also fully supported the UK’s plan to deport asylum seekers to “safe third countries”

A tougher stance on refugee policies has proved popular in Austria, and the centre-left SPÖ party has also seemed to lean toward stricter ideas more recently. However, since the party got a new leadership, a precise migration programme had not been presented yet. However, the issue was pressing, particularly following the party’s poor performance in the EU elections, when migration played a key role.

READ ALSO: How a change in the profile of asylum seekers is impacting Austria

So what are the party’s plans?

The SPÖ presented a new” masterplan” for asylum, migration, and integration. According to the SPÖ, the “Doskozil-Kaiser paper,” which has existed since 2018, has been “sharpened,” resulting in an “offensive paper” with approaches for action, said SPÖ leader Andreas Babler.

The aim was to “ensure balance and order” under “the premise of humanity”, said Babler at a press conference in Vienna.

The plan’s main points include faster procedures at the EU’s external borders, a fair distribution of refugees within the EU, and sanctions against countries that refuse to do so. With this, the SPÖ wants to reach a 75 percent reduction in the number of asylum applications. 

For example, the party leaders mentioned Hungary, where there were only 45 applications in 2023, compared to almost 60,000 in Austria. They said Hungary had to be persuaded to cooperate by exhausting all legal and political means.

The SPÖ proposes procedure centres along the EU’s external borders so that procedures can be completed more quickly and people do not hand themselves over to smugglers. The EU should set up “common centres for asylum applications”, for example, in embassies. 

People should only be distributed within the EU once the asylum applications have been assessed favourably. As a first step, cooperation between individual states could occur without the consent of all EU member states.

READ ALSO: When do Austrians think an immigrant is successfully integrated?

‘Integration year’ and deportation

The SPÖ plan contains an “extended mandatory integration year” that would ensure refugees get “German and values courses.” However, severe penalties, including deportation, would be imposed for serious offences or “repeated minor crimes.” 

Instead of mass accommodation, the SPÖ proposes small centres enabling better contact with the population. Women’s rights should also become a “central guiding principle for integration”. Women’s self-determination is the top priority, said SPÖ women’s spokesperson Eva-Maria Holzleitner.

The party reiterated that asylum is fundamentally a human right that should never be questioned. However, those who are denied their asylum request would be deported to their country of origin or safe third countries, the party advocates. 

READ ALSO: Who needs to take Austria’s integration exam?

Criticism from the right

Over the weekend, party representatives from far-right FPÖ and centre-right ÖVP have come out to criticise the SPÖ proposals. 

An FPÖ spokesperson said the plan is “pure PR policy” and that, in truth, the SPÖ had “always opened the door to illegal mass immigration under the guise of asylum”. The ÖVP said the proposals are just “headlines instead of concrete proposals for solutions”. 

In a press release, the party said that no capacity limit was presented, showing “that the SPÖ has still not realised that illegal migration cannot be countered by further squeezing the Austrian taxpayer”

SHOW COMMENTS