Reclaiming National Sovereignty: The Case of the Conservatives and the Far Right in Austria
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Heinisch, Reinhard
Werner, Annika
Habersack, Fabian
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Routledge
Abstract
This article investigates how and why Austrian parties have
(re)constructed claims of national sovereignty and brought them to
the centre of political competition. Theoretically, claims for national
sovereignty are directed at recovering the people’s autonomy from
‘sinister’ elites and ‘harmful’ outsiders like immigrants. As such
claims vary in terms of policy content, salience, and discursive
means, this article uses the analysis of manifestos and speeches to
ascertain how the radical-right populist Austrian Freedom Party
(FPÖ) constructed sovereignty claims in 2013 and 2017.
Furthermore, it shows how the mainstream right Austrian People’s
Party (ÖVP) adopted these claims, significantly narrowing the gap
to the far-right FPÖ on the national and economic dimension of
sovereignty, and largely renounced its pro-European and antisovereignist positions by 2017. In a second step, we examine
whether the claims by these two parties match the preferences of
their voters. Here, the findings suggest that the FPÖ’s sovereignty
claims broadly correspond to the demands of its voters whereas
ÖVP voters only partially express support for such claims, mainly
on the national sovereignty investigating in detail the form and
conditions of their occurrence.
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Perspectives on European Politics and Society
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License
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