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55 percent rate night-out restrictions as applicable. Meanwhile, the ÖVP is clearly ahead on Sunday’s issue.
1:26 pm, November 7, 2020
the Most Austrians can follow government measures im Fight against coronavirus apparently yet to follow. 55 percent rate night-out restrictions as appropriate, eight percent even not too strict. 33 percent rate it as exaggerated. This is the result of a survey conducted for “profile” by the opinion research institute Unique Research.
For a total of 42 percent, the second lockdown is a sign that the government has lost control of the pandemic. The majority of 54 percent tend to believe this or not at all. 51 percent of those surveyed believe that the situation is more critical now than in March, 23 percent consider the situation to be similar, 19 percent less critical than in spring and seven percent did not provide any information.
Differences between parties
In a Peter Hajek poll for ATV on the same topic, 77 percent of those surveyed said they believe their environment adheres to exit restrictions. 17 percent believe that their environment will be smaller and three percent that they will not adhere to regulations at all. At 90 percent, NEOS voters mostly believe that their personal environment adheres to the measures. At 62 percent, FPÖ voters believe less in the fact that people in their area adhere to exit restrictions.
“Good crisis management”
In another survey by the Institute for Research Affairs for the daily “Österreich”, 55 percent of respondents rate the Federal Chancellor’s overall crisis management Sebastian Kurz (ÖVP) positive. 19 percent think it’s very good, 36 percent think it’s pretty good. 63 percent rate the Federal Chancellor’s crisis management after the terrorist attack as good (25 percent very good, 38 percent quite good).
Health Minister Rudolf anschober (The Greens) emphasized on the radio series Ö1 “Im Journal zu Gast” that the participation of the population in the fight against pandemics was crucial. “Each one decides for himself” if the measures ordered by the government will take effect. “We need solidarity now. If the population now realizes the gravity of the situation, we will handle it. It depends on whether the population participates,” Anschober said and made “the very urgent appeal to the population: now we need you.” We are all part of the solution in a race against time. “
ÖVP in Sunday’s edition ahead
Sunday’s question was also asked in the polls for “profil” and “Austria”. According to Unique research, the ÖVP is currently 38 percent and thus clearly still number one, the SPÖ is 21 and the Greens 12 percent. 16 percent would vote for FPÖ and 10 percent for NEOS. On the chancellor issue, Sebastian Kurz remains unchanged at 40 percent. Runner-up Pamela Rendi-Wagner (SPÖ) reaches twelve percent.
The Institute for Research Affairs has slightly different figures, here the ÖVP stands at 41 percent. The SPÖ is 22 per cent, the FPÖ and the Greens each have eleven per cent. NEOS are at ten percent. On the Chancellor’s question, Kurz got 49 percent, SPÖ boss Rendi-Wagner got 20 percent, FPÖ boss Norbert Hofer got twelve, Green boss Werner Kogler got only nine and NEOS chief Beate Meinl-Reisinger, seven percent.