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National Council (Austria)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromNational Council of Austria)
Lower house of the Austrian Parliament
National Council

Nationalrat
28th Legislative Period
Logo
Type
Type
History
Founded10 November 1920 (1920-11-10)
Preceded byConstituent National Assembly
Leadership
Walter Rosenkranz (FPÖ)
since 24 October 2024
Peter Haubner (ÖVP)
since 24 October 2024
Doris Bures (SPÖ)
since 24 October 2024
Structure
Seats183
Political groups
Government (110)
 ÖVP (51)
 SPÖ (41)
 NEOS (18)

Opposition (73)

 FPÖ (57)
 Greens (16)
Elections
Open listproportional representation with a 4%electoral threshold
Last election
29 September 2024
Next election
By 2029
Meeting place
Austrian Parliament Building,Vienna
Website
parlament.gv.at

TheNational Council (Austrian German:Nationalrat,pronounced[nat͡si̯oˈnaːlˌʁaːt]) is one of the two houses of theAustrian Parliament and is frequently referred to as thelower house. Theconstitution endows the National Council with far more power than theFederal Council.

Responsibilities

[edit]
This article is part of a series on the
Politics of Austria

WögingerBablerKicklMaurerMeinl-Reisinger


  • Upper house of parliament

  • Joint session of both houses
  • (judicial review)
  • (civil and criminal cases)
  • (administrative law cases)
  • Legislative:
  • Presidential:
  • European:

The National Council is where Austria's federallegislative authority is concentrated; for a bill to become federal law, it must be resolved upon by this chamber. Bills passed by the National Council are sent to theFederal Council for corroboration. If the Federal Council approves of the bill or simply does nothing for eight weeks, the bill has succeeded. If the Federal Council vetoes the bill, the National Council may still force it into law by essentially just passing it again; a National Council resolution overruling a Federal Council objection merely has to meet a higherquorum than a regular resolution. In other words, the Federal Council does not have any real power to prevent adoption of legislation, the National Council being easily able to override it. There are three exceptions to this rule:[1]

  • Constitutional laws or regulations limiting the competencies of the federal states
  • Laws relating to the rights of the Federal Council itself
  • Treaties concerning the jurisdiction of the federal states

The approval of the National Council is also required for most of the prerogatives of theFederal Assembly to be exercised. For example, motions to call for areferendum aimed at having the President removed from office by the electorate, and motions todeclare war all need a two-thirds majority in the National Council. Only motions toimpeach the President can also be from the Federal Council.[2]

Elections

[edit]
Regional constituencies in Austria. State constituencies are shown in colors.

The 183 members of the National Council are elected by nationwide popular vote for a term of five years; each Austrian sixteen years or older on the day the election takes place is entitled to one vote. National Council elections aregeneral elections. The voting system aims atparty-list proportional representation and usespartially open lists:

  • For the purpose of National Council elections, the ninestates of Austria constitute regional electoral districts. The nine regional electoral districts are subdivided into a total of 39 local electoral districts. Political parties submit separate ranked lists of candidates for each district, regional or local, in which they have chosen to run. They also submit a federal-level list.
  • Votes cast are first counted within their local electoral districts. Since there are 39 local districts but 183 seats to fill, most local districts are multi-member districts. The number of seats assigned to each local district is based solely on electoral district population, as established by the most recent census; the partitioning and apportionment rules are simple enough to preventgerrymandering from becoming an issue. The number of votes required to win one seat is simply the number of votes divided by the number of seats assigned to the district in question[citation needed] (ie theHare quota). For example, if 150,000 votes are cast in a five-seat local district, it takes 30,000 votes to win one seat. If a party has scored 61,000 votes out of the 150,000 votes cast, it is entitled to two seats, to be taken by the first two candidates on the party's local district list. Since 60,000 votes would have been sufficient to win two seats, 1000 votes are left unaccounted for by this first round of tallying.
  • Any vote not accounted for on the local level is dealt with on the regional level, provided that the party it has been cast for has obtained at least four percent of the regional total vote.[citation needed] The system is analogous to that used on the district level; the number of seats assigned to a regional district is simply the number of seats assigned to one of its constituent local districts but not filled during the first round of tallying.
  • Any vote not accounted for on the regional level either is dealt with on the federal level, provided that the party it has been cast for has obtained at least four percent of the federal total vote. TheD'Hondt method is used to allocate any National Council seats remaining to be filled.

In addition to voting for a party list, voters may express preference for one individual candidate in the same party list. This means it is not possible to simultaneously vote for the party list of one party but exert influence on the candidate rankings on the party list of another party. A candidate receiving sufficiently many personal votes can rise in rank on his or her district party list; voters thus have a certain degree of influence as to which particular individual wins which particular seat.

Peculiarities

[edit]

Austria's federal constitution defines Austria as asemi-presidential democracy: theexecutive branch of government is supposed to be headed by thePresident, but is also answerable to the National Council. In practice, however, nearly all of the day-to-day work of governing is left to theChancellor and Cabinet, which are dependent on the confidence of the National Council. The President has the theoretical right to name anyone eligible to serve in the National Council as a minister or Chancellor. However, the National Council's right to sack a minister or the entire cabinet makes it all but impossible for Presidents to appoint a government entirely of their own choosing or keep it in office against the will of the National Council. While the President has the theoretical authority to dissolve a hostile National Council,constitutional convention prevents this power from being exercised.

Austria accordingly functions as aparliamentary democracy: for all intents and purposes, the cabinet is subject to approval by the National Council and is responsible to it, with the president being little more than a figurehead.

A relateddiscrepancy between Austrian constitutional theory and Austrian political practice is that the constitution defines the President of the National Council to be Austria's second highest public official, junior only to the president proper. As a practical matter, however, the Chancellor, who nominally ranks third in the Austrian order of precedence, is the country's leading political figure. Thus, the President of the National Council is a representative of rather moderate significance: wielding less power than the president by extension means wielding less power than the Chancellor or even most federal ministers. The President of the National Council thus serves mostly as a moderator of parliamentary debate.

Latest election

[edit]
Main article:2024 Austrian legislative election
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Freedom Party of Austria1,408,51428.85+12.6857+26
Austrian People's Party1,282,73426.27-11.1951–20
Social Democratic Party of Austria1,032,23421.14-0.0441+1
NEOS446,3789.14+1.0418+3
The Greens402,1078.24-5.6616–10
Communist PartyKPÖ Plus116,8912.39+1.7000
The Beer Party98,3952.02+1.9200
Madeleine Petrovic List28,4880.58New0New
Der Wandel27,8300.57+0.1100
MFG Austria19,7850.41New0New
Gaza List19,3760.40New0New
The Yellows1560.00New0New
Total4,882,888100.001830
Valid votes4,882,88899.05
Invalid/blank votes46,8570.95
Total votes4,929,745100.00
Registered voters/turnout6,346,05977.68
Source:Interior Ministry,ORF

Results by state

[edit]
States shaded by the parties' result
StateFPÖÖVPSPÖNEOSGrüneOthersTurnout
%S%S%S%S%S%S
Burgenland28.8228.6227.016.5-4.7-4.4-82.5
Carinthia38.4420.8223.127.8-4.7-5.2-76.9
Lower Austria29.21029.91120.278.536.725.5-82.0
Upper Austria30.5926.3820.368.328.426.2-80.1
Salzburg27.7331.6316.819.0-8.5-6.4-78.4
Styria32.2827.0718.658.227.626.4-78.5
Tyrol28.7431.0415.4210.618.116.2-74.3
Vorarlberg27.1229.1213.1112.6111.4-6.7-71.8
Vienna20.7617.4529.9911.4312.348.3-71.9
Nationwide97765-
Austria28.85726.35121.1419.1188.2166.4-77.7
Source:Interior Ministry

Historical composition of the National Council

[edit]

1919-1930

[edit]
  SDAPÖ
  CS
  German National Movement
  GDVP
  National Economy Bloc (GDVP+Landbund)
  Others
Total seats
1919
7269263
170
1920
69852171
183
1923
6882105
165
1927
71859
165
1930
7266198
165

Since 1945

[edit]
  KPÖ
  SPÖ
  GRÜNE
  JETZT
  LiF
  NEOS
  ÖVP
  BZÖ
  FRANK
  VdU/FPÖ
Total seats
1945
47685
165
1949
5677716
165
1953
4737414
165
1956
374826
165
1959
78798
165
1962
76818
165
1966
74856
165
1970
81786
165
1971
938010
183
1975
938010
183
1979
957711
183
1983
908112
183
1986
8087718
183
1990
80106033
183
1994
6513115242
183
1995
719105241
183
1999
65145252
183
2002
69177918
183
2006
682166721
183
2008
5720512134
183
2013
52249471140
183
2017
528106251
183
2019
4026157131
183
2024
4116185157
183

Current composition of the National Council

[edit]
Main article:List of members of the National Council of Austria
GroupMembersLeader
Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ)
57 / 183
Herbert Kickl
Austrian People's Party (ÖVP)
51 / 183
Christian Stocker
Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ)
41 / 183
Andreas Babler
NEOS – The New Austria and Liberal Forum (NEOS)
18 / 183
Beate Meinl-Reisinger
The Greens – The Green Alternative (GRÜNE)
16 / 183
Sigrid Maurer
No group affiliation
0 / 183
Source:National Council

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The Responsibilities of the Federal Council – The Federal Council's Right of Objection". Website of the Austrian Parliament. Archived fromthe original on 2015-07-05. Retrieved2010-10-04.
  2. ^"Federal Assembly - Responsibilities and Legal Principles".parlament.gv.at. Archived fromthe original on 24 March 2009. Retrieved18 May 2010.

External links

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