Austrian chancellor hits out at far-right
anti-vaxxers
In POLITICO interview, Alexander Schallenberg defends
compulsory vaccination law.
BY MATTHEW
KARNITSCHNIG
November
24, 2021 12:39 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/austria-schallenberg-far-right-anti-vaxxers/
VIENNA —
Austrian Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg blamed the far-right Freedom Party
for fueling vaccine skepticism that has driven a dramatic rise in coronavirus
infections and led the country to introduce a hard lockdown as well as Europe’s
first compulsory coronavirus vaccine law.
In an
interview with POLITICO in his chancellery in Vienna, Schallenberg said his
government had been left with no choice but to take radical measures in the
face of spiraling infection rates, overflowing intensive care units and an
unyielding cohort of anti-vaxxers.
Though
anti-vax sentiment is not hard to find across much of the West, what sets
Austria apart is that the Freedom Party (FPÖ), one of the country’s largest
opposition forces, has championed the cause with fervor.
“This a
major difference between us and other European countries,” said Schallenberg,
whose center-right People's Party was in a coalition with the FPÖ from 2017 to
2019.
“It’s
irresponsible, especially if you consider that a large percentage of the representatives
of this party are vaccinated, but still spread fake news about deworming
remedies.”
Resistance
to the government’s pandemic policies hardened in recent weeks. As in a number
of other European cities last weekend, thousands of people took to the streets
of Vienna on Saturday to protest coronavirus measures. The marchers, estimated
to number up to 40,000, were a motley group of far-right activists, adherents
of alternative medicine and hardline libertarians.
The Freedom
Party, whose leader Herbert Kickl was unable to participate in Saturday’s
demonstration after contracting COVID-19, has vowed to challenge the compulsory
vaccine law in the courts. "As of today, Austria has become a
dictatorship!" Kickl declared in a statement after the government
announced the planned vaccine measure.
Schallenberg,
who studied law, said he was confident the measure, which the government hopes
to introduce in February, would withstand judicial scrutiny, an assessment
shared by many legal scholars.
After weeks
of resisting a return to blanket restrictions, Schallenberg, who took office in
October following the sudden resignation of Sebastian Kurz over a corruption
scandal, changed course on Friday. The government's decision came as Austria’s
intensive care wards have been overrun by COVID-19 patients, pushing hospitals
in some areas to the brink of collapse.
“We want to
escape this vicious circle of unpredictable infection waves followed by
lockdown discussions, but to do so, a higher percentage of the population has
to be vaccinated,” Schallenberg said, sitting in a white leather chair under a
crystal chandelier in his spacious office.
“This path
isn’t easy, but one also has to accept that we want to leave this pandemic
behind us,” he said. “We have the power to do that in our hands because science
has given it to us.”
Schallenberg
said he “fully acknowledged” his previous opposition to radical steps (voiced
publicly even just before Friday's announcement), which he said was driven by a
desire to shield the two-thirds of the population that “did its part” by
getting vaccinated from further restrictions.
“To ask for
a further act of solidarity from them for the greater good was something I’d
hoped we could avoid,” he said, adding that he made the decisions with “a heavy
heart,” considering the enormous economic and social costs.
The
three-week lockdown, coming at the beginning of the lucrative winter tourist
season, will starve Austria’s economy of billions of euros in revenue and leave
many small businesses facing an uncertain future.
Dramatic
reversal
Austria’s
dramatic reversal reflects the degree to which a pandemic many European leaders
were confident the Continent had left in the rear-view mirror is once again
dominating the political agenda, forcing capitals to make decisions that just a
few weeks ago would have been unthinkable.
In Central
Europe, COVID-19 has returned with a vengeance in recent weeks, leaving
governments to once again weigh the economic fallout of a lockdown against the
human cost of not acting. Along with Austria, Slovenia, the Czech Republic and
Slovakia have seen cases soar with daily infection rates reaching record
levels. Meanwhile, parts of Germany are already on lockdown and outgoing
Chancellor Angela Merkel has told the country to brace for more restrictions.
Vienna's move on compulsory vaccines has sparked a similar debate in Berlin.
Experts
blame a subdued vaccination rate, which allows the virus to spread unabated,
for the rise in Austria and the other hard-hit areas. In Austria, some 65
percent of the population has been fully vaccinated, slightly below the EU
average and far behind countries such as Portugal, Malta and Spain, where the
vaccination rate is above 80 percent.
In other
Central European countries, the vaccination figure is even lower. In Austria's
neighbor Slovakia, for example, only 43 percent of the population has been
immunized.
Though
Austria weathered the first waves of the pandemic in better shape than many
countries in terms of infections and deaths, the country suffered a major hit
to its reputation in 2020 after authorities ignored signs that the coronavirus
was spreading in Ischgl, a Tyrolean ski resort. Many experts believe that
failure played a central role in the pandemic’s rapid spread across Europe in
2020.
That
history is one reason the latest deliberations have been so fraught.
Schallenberg’s
government, a coalition between the People’s Party and the Greens, is betting
that the combination of a lockdown and vaccine mandate will help the country
turn the page on the pandemic.
But getting
there won’t be easy. The Freedom Party, for one, will ensure that vaccination
remains a divisive issue in the country’s political debate for the foreseeable
future.
That
pressure could further erode waning confidence in Schallenberg’s government.
About 40 percent of the public considers the government’s pandemic management
to be “extremely poor,” according to a poll released over the weekend. Support
for the People’s Party, which tanked after the corruption allegations against
Kurz emerged, has continued to drop.
Accidental
chancellor
A career diplomat
with aristocratic ancestry, Schallenberg, 52, served as foreign minister until
the People’s Party tapped him to replace Kurz.
While
Schallenberg has been careful not to publicly distance himself from Kurz, whom
he insists will be vindicated of criminal wrongdoing, he has also made clear
that he is his own man.
One of his
first decisions was to move his office, housed in Vienna’s 18th-century baroque
chancellery, from the dark-panelled chamber Kurz had used to its traditional
location on the other side of the building. Schallenberg’s new rooms are the
same used by the building’s most storied occupant: Klemens von Metternich, the
19th-century chancellor who was for decades the power behind the Hapsburg
throne.
Unlike his
immediate predecessor, Schallenberg is not a political animal, having only
become a People's Party member in 2020 after joining Kurz’s Cabinet.
But
whatever political experience he lacked going into the chancellery,
Schallenberg has gained plenty during his first month on the job. After
spending his early days as chancellor dealing with the aftermath of the
government shake-up and questions about whether he was merely a stand-in for
Kurz, who still heads the People’s Party, the pandemic presented Schallenberg
with an even thornier problem.
Despite the
headwinds, Schallenberg, Austria’s fourth chancellor in as many years, said he
intends to serve out his term, which isn’t scheduled to end until the fall of
2024. Most observers doubt the coalition, already strained to the limit by the
Kurz scandal, will last that long. Yet for the moment, neither party, given
their poor showing in the polls, would appear to have much interest in
triggering a new election. And with Kurz on the sidelines for the foreseeable
future, the People's Party has few options but to stick with Schallenberg.
“The
government is stable and the fact that we can reach difficult decisions like
the coronavirus measures proves our ability to act,” Schallenberg said.
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