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Composition of the Austrian provincial parliaments

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Austrian provincial parliaments are the unicameral legislatures of the nine Austrian provinces, according to the Constitution of Austria deciding in all matters unless explicitly subject of federal legislation. On federal level the provincial parliaments are represented in the Federal Council.

Nine political parties are represented in the provincial parliaments, of which six are represented in more than one. Currently, the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ), and Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) are represented in all nine provincial parliaments. The Greens are represented in eight, and NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS) is represented in six. Also, the leftist-socialist Communist Party (KPÖ) is represented in two parliaments, while the fiscal-liberal and regionalist Team Carinthia, the populist MFG and the anti-corruption regionalist Citizens' Forum (FRITZ), are represented in one parliament each.

Composition

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Province Seats ÖVP SPÖ FPÖ Grüne NEOS KPÖ TK FRITZ MFG Term Last
election
Next
election
Ref
Burgenland 36 11 19 4 2 5 years 2020 2025 [1]
Carinthia 36 7 15 9 5 5 years 2023 2028 [2]
Lower Austria 56 23 12 14 4 3 5 years 2023 2028 [3]
Salzburg 36 12 7 10 3 4 5 years 2023 2028 [4]
Styria 48 13 10 17 3 3 2 5 years 2024 2029 [5]
Tyrol 36 14 7 7 3 2 3 5 years 2022 2027 [6]
Upper Austria 56 22 11 11 7 2 3 6 years 2021 2027 [7]
Vienna 100 22 46 8 16 8 5 years 2020 2025 [8]
Vorarlberg 36 15 3 11 4 3 5 years 2024 2029 [9]

Parties involved in government are shaded; parties leading governments are indicated in bold.

Diagrams

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States Map

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Landtagswahlen 2020 - Land Burgenland".
  2. ^ "Landtag - Land Kärnten".
  3. ^ "Wahlen – NÖ Landtag".
  4. ^ "Land Salzburg - der Salzburger Landtag".
  5. ^ "Abgeordnete Landtag Steiermark".
  6. ^ "Tiroler Landtag".
  7. ^ "Land Oberösterreich - Wahlen - Ergebnis".
  8. ^ "Wiener Landtag".
  9. ^ "Startseite - Landtag - Land Vorarlberg".