Fischer was a member of the Austrian parliament, theNational Council, from 1971, and served as itspresident from 1990 to 2002. From 1983 to 1987 he was minister for science in a coalition government headed byFred Sinowatz.
In January 2004 Fischer announced that he would run for president to succeedThomas Klestil. He waselected on 25 April 2004 as the candidate of the oppositionSocial Democratic Party. He polled 52.4 per cent of the votes to defeatBenita Ferrero-Waldner, then foreign minister in the ruling conservative coalition led by thePeople's Party.
Fischer was sworn in on 8 July 2004 and took over office from the college of presidents of the National Council, who had acted for the president following Klestil's death on 6 July.
In April 2010, Fischer wasre-elected president of Austria, winning a second six-year term in office with almost 79% of the votes. Thevoter turnout of merely 53.6% was a record low.[6] Around a third of those eligible to vote voted for Fischer, leading the conservative dailyDie Presse to describe the election as an "absolute majority for non-voters".[7] The reasons behind the low turnout may have been that pollsters had predicted a safe victory for Fischer (past Austrian presidents running for a second term had always won) and that the other large party,ÖVP, had not nominated a candidate of their own, and had not endorsed any of the three candidates. Prominent ÖVP members, unofficially but in public, even suggested to cast a blank vote, which 7% of the voters did.
^"External lecturers". Department of Political Science, University of Innsbruck. Archived fromthe original on 16 October 2017. Retrieved28 February 2017.