X Close

Half of Austrians support ‘comprehensive remigration’

Supporters of the far-Right Austrian Freedom Party (FPO). Credit: Getty

November 29, 2024 - 11:20am

Half of Austria’s overall population (50%) is in favour of “comprehensive remigration”, according to a new survey from the Archives of the Austrian Resistance (AAR) which also found that some 36% of people in the country do not want to live beside Muslims.

The online polling by Marketagent of 2,198 Austrians between April and May this year measured the country’s attitudes towards ethnic minorities and democracy. This was the first “Right-wing extremism barometer” commissioned by the AAR, a museum in Vienna founded by resistance fighters after the Second World War which documents the history of Nazism and Right-wing extremism. It found that around 10% of those surveyed had views they categorise as extremist. While AAR director Andreas Kranebitter said the findings do not give cause for national alarm, he conceded they were concerning.

The survey assessed respondents’ political leanings based on whether they agreed with statements such as “Our people are naturally superior to other peoples” or “I want a strong man at the head of this country who does not have to worry about a parliament”.

Which of these groups of people would Austrians not like to have as neighbours?

Around 29% of those classified as having “pronounced Right-wing extremist views” believe that equality in Austria has gone too far. Almost half of this group also conceive of Austria as “part of a German ethnic and cultural community”.

When it comes to the general population’s attitudes towards ethnic minorities, 38% said they do not want to live next to Roma or Sinti people, 36% beside Muslims, and 10% next to Jews, while 29% also think that Muslims should be banned from immigrating to the country. Separately, 16 % of the general population said they do not want to live next door to transgender people.

This survey comes after last week’s victory for Austria's Freedom Party (FPO) in state elections in the region of Styria. It is only the second state Herbert Kickl’s party has ever won in. Despite coming first in September’s general elections with 29% of the vote, the FPO has been excluded from current coalition talks to form a government. Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen asked the leader of the conservative People’s Party (OVP) and incumbent Chancellor Karl Nehammer to form a coalition.

The survey also suggests a significant amount of antisemitism is linked to Israel’s war in Gaza. Some 42% of the general population, and 60% of those with extremist views, agreed that Israel's policy in Palestine is like that of the Nazis during the Second World War.

During the election, Kickl played into fears over increased immigration, calling for the suspension of the right to asylum in order to create “Fortress Austria”. He has also used the term Volkskanzler (people's chancellor), a phrase once used by the Nazis to refer to Adolf Hitler, while his rhetoric has been aided by a stagnant economy and high inflation.

Nehammer is still refusing to work with Kickl and the FPO. “It's impossible to form a government with someone who adores conspiracy theories,” he told the media in September. “[Someone] who describes the WHO, the World Health Organisation, as the next world government and the economic forum in Davos as preparation for global domination.”


Max Mitchell is UnHerd’s Assistant Editor, Newsroom.

MaxJMitchell1

Join the discussion


Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber


To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.

Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.

Subscribe
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

12 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
5 hours ago

Interesting survey results. It’s encouraging because the vast majority of people have no issue living beside gay people or people of colour. It appears they don’t want live next door to people with extreme ideologies.

Of the 10% who don’t want to live beside Jews, I very much doubt these are people the author considers far right. They are almost certainly far left.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
3 hours ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

If the 10% are a Muslim would you consider them far right or far left?

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
2 hours ago

Good point. No idea.

Arthur G
Arthur G
1 hour ago

Islam doesn’t map onto the European Left-Right spectrum.

Daniel Lee
Daniel Lee
4 hours ago

Not surrendering your country and your cultural values to large numbers of assimilation-resistant newcomers who are then encouraged in their refusal to assimilate by your own out-of-touch Woke leaders is not an extremist position.

John Tyler
John Tyler
5 hours ago

Any mention of Nazism in relation to this survey is just nonsense.

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
3 hours ago

A few comments on this from this forum’s resident Austrian:
The word “remigration” has got a bad reputation since it was (allegedly) used by the right wing nasty Martin Sellner at a meeting in Potsdam to refer to the repatriation of migrants, including those who have dual nationality. Quite what was said at that meeting is still unclear but the general hysteria over it has served to make the word “remigration” a flashpoint in the heated and not very constructive discussion over migration in Austria which has actually helped to make the FPÖ so strong.
This freak-out over a single word is in my opinion quite daft. We now have the situation where the word “remigration” is kind of off limits or seen as “far-right” while much harsher words like “Abschiebung” (deportation) and “Ausweisung” (being ordered to leave the country) are used quite routinely.
I quite happily use the word “remigration” to refer to the removal/ordering to leave of a large group of people who do not have/no longer have the right to be here. In other words, executing existing laws. And I suspect the people who answered this survey understand “remigration” in a similar way to me and have no truck with all the overwrought fuss over it.
With regard to people not wanting to live next door to a Muslim: this question is also misleading. If you asked most people whether they’d be bothered living next to a Bosnian Muslim, almost no one would mind. I think the issue is whether they want to live next door to people from drastically different cultures (who also happen to be Muslim).
As I mention frequently, I live in an area with a big Turkish population. A lot of those people are quite conservative in their outlook and not very well integrated. I like living in the area but there are certain habits of theirs that annoy me and I would not like to have in my house. For example, the Turkish tendency to stay up late at night in summer and be out on the street/in the common parts of the house making noise until late. Austrians, by contrast, tend to withdraw into their own living spaces quite early and keep themselves to themselves. It’s not surprising that one group is going to rub the other up the wrong way.
Such cohabitation aversion is likely to be less about religion and more about clashing cultural habits.
Conclusion: take these findings with a pinch of salt.

Last edited 3 hours ago by Katharine Eyre
Andrew H
Andrew H
2 hours ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

Thanks for this. Interesting to hear a perspective from Austria. Schönes Wochenende!

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
37 minutes ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

As you say Katherine these findings certainly require to be taken with a pinch of salt. My fairly conservative in-laws lived next door to a Muslim Pakistani family with whom they got on very well. The father was a psychiatrist and his sons all trained to be medical doctors, several married Catholic girls and all dressed in the normal English manner and were happy to exchange gifts at Christmas. They were effectively fully integrated apart from their religion and support for Pakistan in cricket.

I have no idea whether if asked the question about living next door to a Muslim family my in-laws would have said they would be happy on the basis of their actual experience or they would have thought about the prospect of living next to a family that dressed in some ethnic garb and had no interest in integrating and had some habits similar to your Turkish neighbours which would not have evoked the same positive feelings in them.

As others have observed there is no way of telling whether those who did not wish to live next to Jews and homosexuals were in fact not ethnic Austrians but of Muslim origin themselves and so not exactly far right in the traditional sense.

james elliott
james elliott
1 hour ago

50% is extraordinarily low.

I would have thought at least 75% of Austrians would support the removal of people who cost them billions, spit on their culture and – occasionally – murder their children.

John Galt
John Galt
34 minutes ago

> , 38% said they do not want to live next to Roma or Sinti people

So I’m an ignorant American and don’t know much about the “travellers” but my understanding of hearing from anyone that has ever interacted with them is that the only people who have no problem living next to the Roma is people that have never met the Roma?

Is this true, what exactly is it that causes them to have such a bad reputation?

Liam Sohal
Liam Sohal
1 hour ago

One of the takeaways of this survey is that 36% of Austrians don’t want intolerant bigots living beside them, which is encouraging. But I’d like to know what the other 64% said. Perhaps many responses were ‘decline to answer’.