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Far Right win 30% in Austrian Election

This is indeed worrying; not least because the Zionist entity has close ties with European far-right parties, which are gaining ground throughout Europe.
No one in 16th century England nor Germany in the 1930s would have dared talk about a "Judeo-Christian" civilisation for the simple reason that Christians were the main persecutors of Jews.

But truth does not stop good propaganda.

When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was interviewed on French television recently, he was asked whether anyone could compare, as he had just done, the allied landing at Normandy to Israel's attack on Gaza.

Netanyahu replied in French. "Our victory is your victory! It's the victory of Judeo-Christian civilisation over barbarism. It is the victory of France! If we win here, you win here," he told TF1.

The fact that a major French commercial channel gave a platform to a man awaiting an arrest warrant for war crimes produced a large demonstration in Paris.

But looks should not deceive.
 
The Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer resigns after talks on forming a government collapsed
euronews 04/01/2025
“We have tried everything up to this point. An agreement on key points is not possible, so it makes no sense for a positive future for Austria,” Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer from the conservative People’s Party was quoted as saying by Austrian broadcaster ORF.

Neos, alongside Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer's conservative Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) and the centre-left Social Democrats (SPÖ) had been trying to forge a three-party ruling coalition after right-wing Freedom Party won national elections in September.
Neos leader Beate Meinl-Reisinger said progress was impossible and that "fundamental reforms" had not been agreed upon. She informed the other party leaders that Neos members "won't continue" talks.

Talks had dragged on after all other parties refused to work with the leader of the Freedom Party (FPÖ), Herbert Kickl, who came first with 29.2% of the vote, forcing the ÖVP and the SPÖ to try and recruit a smaller party to bolster their majority.
A fresh election is now the next step. The right-wing FPÖ immediately welcomed such a possibility as opinion polls indicate their support has only grown since the election. In a survey commissioned by newspaper Der Standard, the FPÖ increased their support to 35% of the vote according to prospective voters in December.
 
Austrian far-right victory foreshadows dystopia for Muslim population
middleeasteye 26 January 2025
It is a historical novelty.

For the first time since the end of the Nazi regime, the leader of the Freedom Party of Austria (FPO) - a political party that was established by ex-Nazis for ex-Nazis, and that has grown to become a major force in Austrian politics since the early 1990s - has the chance to not only join a government as a partner but to actually lead the government, with its party leader becoming the future chancellor.

This happened three months after the party emerged as the main victor in the national parliamentary elections and the collapse of coalition talks among the conservatives, Social Democrats, and liberals.
 
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