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Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Beer Party founder shakes up Austria presidential race

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With his long dark hair and torn jeans, punk rock singer Dominik Wlazny of Austria’s Beer Party seems an unlikely candidate for the country’s next president.

But that’s exactly what the 35-year-old aims to be, as he seeks to shake up a presidential race dominated by politicians mostly backed by more established parties—several rocked by corruption scandals.

Running against six others, including incumbent Alexander Van der Bellen, Wlazny is the first-ever presidential candidate from the Beer Party, named for its advocacy of the popular beverage.

Wlazny describes his campaign for the October 9 vote as a “David vs Goliath fight,” with Van der Bellen widely tipped to clinch a second mandate.

But he’s hoping to win some voters over with his party’s unconventional approach to politics.

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The party’s goals include having a fountain in the capital that dispenses beer, saying in a proposal to the city it could “raise the quality of life” for residents and draw tourists.

Wlazny’s bare-bones presidential campaign, dubbed “Let’s talk about it,” pushes for gender equality and animal welfare, among other issues.

His messaging is also unconventional, sending updates via online satirical clips, and Wlazny says his appeal is to anyone who “has a desire for change.”

“Beer is a great thing. But actually it’s about how you can get involved, and you don’t have to be a beer drinker for that,” Wlazny, better known by his stage name Marco Pogo, told AFP.

The Beer Party, founded by Wlazny in 2015 as a “satirical project,” now has some 1,000 members. Wlazny and 10 others serve as district counsellors in Vienna following 2020 city elections.

With some six million people eligible to cast their ballots, polls put Wlazny as likely to earn just around five percent in the presidential election with Van der Bellen getting some 60 percent.

The 78-year-old ecologist has to earn more than 50 percent of the vote, or else face his closest challenger in a run-off in November.

In 2016, Van der Bellen had to fight it out in two rounds when a far-right politician raked in more votes than expected, but a series of graft allegations has since eroded the far-right’s support and shaken the EU member’s conservative-led government.

The presidential post itself is mostly ceremonial, but Wlazny believes he could do “a lot of good things.”

As president, Wlazny says, he would vet candidates proposed as ministers, making them go through a hiring process like in a company, to seek to avoid political chaos due to unfit leaders.

Currently the president usually doesn’t reject the government’s choices.

“I often have the feeling that it’s harder to get an apprenticeship in Austria than a ministerial post,” Wlazny said.

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