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It is an election campaign in the electoral campaign that the Vienna FP around Dominik Nepp and the former federal president excluded with his own list, Heinz-Christian Strache, are delivering. More recently, even the blue parade ground, the Viktor-Adler-Markt in Favoriten, was contested. With the result that Strache appeared there on Wednesday at his last rally and accused Nepp of “having lived through treason.” The top candidate of the FP has the last words today, and will hardly have friendly words for his former sponsor.
As main beneficiaries in Whlermarkt, the main candidate for vice president Gernot Blmel and the mayor of the SP, Michael Ludwig, can watch the blue and blue waders dance quietly as spectators.
According to polls, the FP will remain ten from 30.8 percent in 2015. Strache’s list is measured at the existential limit of five percent. The question of whether there will be one or two third-field games at Vienna City Hall in the future is undoubtedly the closest race to be decided on Sunday. For Strache personally, it’s still exciting afterward. While investigations into the Ibiza video concerning him have been discontinued, those accused of spending abuse are still in full swing. The Vienna prosecutor’s office accuses Strache of unjustifiably extracting more than half a million euros from his party as head of the FP for undeclared invoices. Account openings have already started.
In this case, the decision to press charges is not made before the election. According to reports, there will be movement in part of the Cause shortly after October 11. This is the 2,500 euros that Strache has received as a monthly rental grant from FP for his house in Klosterneuburg for about seven years. Which basically both sides confirm.
Because the more than 200,000 euros would have been subject to income tax, there is now the threat of an economic criminal process (up to five years in prison). If Strache, for whom the presumption of innocence applies, therefore has to go to court, it should be clarified in the coming weeks.
Article of
Lucian Mayringer
Startup Policy Editor