Michael Ludwig becomes Sebastian Kurz’s opponent



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The Viennese SPÖ is of the opinion that the Greens are of no use to them anyway because they cannot prevail against the ÖVP in the federal government; check out federal gardens closed during closing.

Briefly erase SPÖ’s complaint from the table

And from Kurz, the red countries don’t have much to look forward to anyway, as the Chancellor demonstrated once again in a KURIER interview this Sunday. There are “bigger problems” than the integration of the SPÖ countries into the management of the crown in the same way as the turquoise, Kurz said, and he wiped the SPÖ’s complaints about “second-class treatment” from the table.

Given these signs of mutual evaluation, even tougher disputes can now be expected between the federal government and Vienna. Red Councilor Peter Hacker is already well warmed up in this regard.

Ludwig gathers brief bourgeois critics around him

The Chancellor must see it as a provocation that Ludwig is now gathering the sharpest brief critiques of the bourgeois camp through his pink alliance. Former ÖVP MPs, ÖVP employees and supporters, who deeply reject Kurz, frolic in the Neos.

The third member of the coalition of opponents to Kurz is the president of the Vienna Chamber of Commerce, Walter Ruck. The “nuclear war” is being fought between Ruck and the turquoise ÖVP leadership in Vienna, as an insider recently told KURIER.

Ludwig made it clear on election night that there would be another menage à trois in Vienna.

Greens maneuvered between the fronts

The Vienna Greens have maneuvered between the fronts in this match. They didn’t raise the flag on the city side when the federal gardens were closed: the coalition with the ÖVP in the federal government was still young, apparently they didn’t want to shoot everyone. But then Deputy Mayor Birgit Hebein made an unnecessary affront: she announced, above the head of the mayor, together with the Turkish district chief the “city without cars”. A city leader can hardly accept such a thing. From the point of view of the Vienna SPÖ, the Greens have not been reliable partners since.

Balancing act for Werner Kogler

For the federal government itself, the expulsion of the Greens in Vienna does not exactly mean stabilization. In Vienna, the Greens will now oppose the left, and in the federal government, the parent party must rule superpragmatically with the ÖVP.

This balancing act will not be easy for Werner Kogler.

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