VIENNA ā Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said Saturday he will resign in the coming days after talks on forming a new government failed a second time.
The announcement came after the Peopleās Party and the Social Democrats on Saturday continued coalition talks a day after the liberal Neos partyās surprise withdrawal from discussions.
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āUnfortunately I have to tell you today that the negotiations have ended and will not be continued by the Peopleās Party,ā said Nehammer, the conservative party's leader, in a statement on social media.
He said that ādestructive forcesā in the Social Democratic Party have āgained the upper handā and that the Peopleās Party will not sign on to a program that it considers to be against economic competitiveness.
Social democratic leader Andreas Babler said he regretted the Peopleās Party decision to end the talks. āThis is not a good decision for our country,ā he said.
Babler said that one of the main stumbling blocks had to do with how to repair the ārecord deficitā left by the previous government.
āI have offered to Karl Nehammer and the Peopleās Party to continue negotiating and called on them not to give up," he told reporters Saturday evening.
The next government in Austria faces the challenge of having to save between 18 to 24 billion euros, according to the EU Commission. In addition, Austria has been in a recession for the past two years, is experiencing rising unemployment, and its budget deficit is currently at 3.7% of Gross Domestic Product ā above the EUās limit of 3%.
Babler blamed the collapse of the negotiations on āforces within the Peopleās Partyā that were against a coalition with the Social Democrats, while praising Nehammer for his readiness to compromise.
A coalition between the Peopleās Party and the Social Democrats was considered shaky from the beginning since the two parties together only have a razor-thin one-seat majority in the Austrian parliament.
It was not immediately clear what would happen next.
The Peopleās Party will have to search for a replacement for Nehammer, who has always ruled out the possibility of a coalition with far-right leader Herbert Kickl. But Nehammerās expected resignation could now prompt the party to rethink its options under new leadership.
People's Party officials planned to meet Sunday to discuss choosing a new leader.
The Peopleās Party and the far-right Freedom Party are close on economic policies as well as other issues such as migration and are already working together in five coalitions on the local level.
An early election would be another option. But given Austrian election laws, such an election would unlikely take place before May.
Coalition talks had dragged on after Austriaās president tasked the conservative chancellor in October with putting together a new government. The request came after all other parties refused to work with the leader of the far-right Freedom Party, which in September won a national election for the first time with 29.2% of the vote.
According to the latest opinion polls published in December, the Freedom Party increased its support to between 35% and 37%.
Party leader Herbert Kickl criticized Nehammer, Babler and Austriaās President Alexander Van der Bellen in a written statement on Saturday evening for having created āchaos instead of stabilityā and said the ball is now in Van der Bellenās court.
Van der Bellen is expected to make a statement tomorrow, Austrian's public broadcaster ORF reports.