Austrian legislative election, 1986 - Factbites
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Topic: Austrian legislative election, 1986


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In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
 Austria legislative election, 1986 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The elections of 1986 marked a major turning point in Austrian politics, since it resulted in the creation of a "grand coalition" between the SPÖ and the ÖVP which continued until 1999.
These were also the first elections when the Greens entered parliament, following a merger between a left-wing and a right-wing green party, neither of which had obtained a sufficient number of votes to gain seats in parliament in 1983.
election of Kurt Waldheim as Austrian president) and replace the SPÖ as the leading party.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Austria_legislative_election,_1986

  
 Austrian Press and Information Service
The excellent election returns of the last few years, which reflect the growing confidence of the voters in the party’s political work, are seen by the party leaders as making it incumbent upon them to defend the interests of Austrian citizens to the best of their ability.
Austria's constitution is guided by the rule of law and based on the republican, democratic and federal principles as well as on the strict division of legislative and executive powers and of the judiciary and administration.
After the first elections to the Nationalrat, in November 1945, in which the Communists won only four out of a total of 165 seats, there was, until 1947, one communist minister in addition to the cabinet members representing the two major parties.
www.austria.org /oldsite/govern.htm

  
 Austrian Information
Elections in Austria are based on the principle of proportional representation, which has been reasserted in the provisions governing elections to the Nationalrat which entered into force on 1 May, 1993.
Federal legislation is the responsibility of the Nationalrat and the Bundesrat, respectively the lower and upper chambers of the Austrian Parliament.
The right to vote extends to all citizens who have celebrated their 18th birthday before 1 January of the election year; all women and men who have reached the age of 19 before 1 January of the election year have the right to be elected.
www.austria.org /oldsite/apr00/politicalsys.html

  
 Datasets
Coding problems with Austrian data: 1986-1999 (16 KB WORD.rtf format)
1997 legislative election sub-national results [1st round, departments] (19 KB SPSS.sav format)
1995 legislative election sub-national results (17 KB SPSS.sav format)
www.politik.uni-mainz.de /ereps/datasets.htm

  
 John Newman (Australian politician) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Following a by-election in the seat of Cabramatta, Newman was elected to Legislative Assembly of New South Wales on February 1, 1986.
John Newman was the son of Austrian and Yugoslav parents, who settled in Cabramatta when he was a small child.
He was Deputy Mayor in 1985-86 and also served as Acting Mayor in 1986.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Newman_(Australian_politician)

  
 John Newman (Australian politician) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Following a by-election in the seat of Cabramatta, Newman was elected to Legislative Assembly of New South Wales on
John Newman was the son of Austrian and Yugoslav parents, who settled in
He was Deputy Mayor in 1985-86 and also served as Acting Mayor in 1986.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Newman_(Australian_politician)

  
 World Scene - The Washington Times: World Scene - April 18, 2005
Haider, who is a brilliant orator, wants to relaunch the Austrian far right he led to many victories since taking the helm of the Freedom Party in 1986 up to the day it won 27 percent of the vote in the 2000 legislative election.
SALZBURG-- Austria's far-right icon Joerg Haider was elected to the leadership of his new party, Alliance for Austria's Future (BZO), yesterday as he seeks a second wind in his roller-coaster career.
The ambitious 55-year-old politician said April 4 that he would abandon Austria's junior governing coalition member, the Freedom Party, after five years of worsening results and set up the more moderate BZO, which celebrated its founding congress in Salzburg yesterday.
washingtontimes.com /world/20050418-123654-6079r.htm   (573 words)

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