Austria’s Communists Are Showing How Class Politics Is Done

In Sunday’s state elections in Salzburg, Austria, the Communist Party scored 12% of the vote. Their success mobilizing around housing issues shows that a focus on working people’s material needs can rally support even in long-conservative areas.

Communist Party of Austria leader Kay-Michael Dankl at a demonstration with fellow party members and supporters in September, 2022. (@kay_dankl / Twitter)

On Sunday, April 23, Austria’s political landscape was rocked by a true earthquake. In legislative elections in the state of Salzburg, where conservative and far-right parties combined currently control over 60 percent of the seats, the Communist Party of Austria (KPÖ) won 11.7 percent and thirty-one thousand of the votes cast. This result put the party in fourth place, behind the conservative Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP, 30.4 percent), the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ, 25.7 percent), and the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ, 17.9 percent) — yet ahead of the Greens and the libertarian NEOS, who each failed to achieve the minimum threshold to return to the state legislature.

This result is striking in many respects. The last and only time that the KPÖ had earned a mandate in a Salzburg state election was in 1945, off the back of the Allied victory in World War II, when it managed a modest 3.8 percent of the vote. In most Salzburg state elections since then, the Communists have not even cracked the 1 percent mark — when they have bothered to run at all. In the last election in 2018, they received a mere 0.4 percent and one thousand votes.

Yet the KPÖ’s success is not just unprecedented for Salzburg state. Before Sunday, the party had never managed a double-digit result in any Austrian state election. Even in Styria — for decades the only Austrian state with Communist representatives in its legislature — the party won 6 percent of the vote and two mandates in 2019, the most recent election year. Now it will likely control four of the thirty-six seats in the next Salzburg state legislature.

Of the €1,800 he earns each month as a city councilmember, Communist Kay-Michael Dankl donates €400 to a social fund set up to provide financial assistance to people in need.

The KPÖ also gave a strong showing in the city of Salzburg itself — the fourth-largest in Austria, with over one hundred fifty thousand people. There, it came in second place with 21.5 percent of the vote, only three points behind the ÖVP. This result approaches typical KPÖ electoral performances in the Styrian capital of Graz, the Communists’ national stronghold, where local party chair Elke Kahr won a surprise victory with 28.8 percent of the vote in the 2021 municipal election. Since then, Kahr has served as the only Communist mayor of a major European city. Yet with the next Salzburg municipal election scheduled for 2024, there is already speculation in national media about whether a second Austrian state capital could soon be governed by a Communist.

A Surprise With a Long Prehistory

Many analyses of the KPÖ’s Salzburg surprise have focused on the young, charismatic candidate at the top of the party’s electoral list, the thirty-four-year-old historian and museum tour guide Kay-Michael Dankl. A native of Salzburg city who spent part of his teenage years in Tucson, Arizona, the plain-spoken Dankl comes off as authentic and genuine. According to the initial reactions on election night, he was especially successful in winning over voters who feel alienated from the political status quo.

Yet the fact that Dankl stood for election as a Communist was hardly inevitable. Dankl’s political career began during his time at the University of Salzburg, where he became active in the student organization of Austria’s Green Party. Later, from 2015–17, he headed the Greens’ party school in Salzburg and served as the leader of their national youth organization, the Young Greens. But when the Young Greens criticized the Greens’ lack of class politics and internal democracy several months prior to the 2017 Austrian parliamentary election, they were unceremoniously expelled from their mother party.

Just a few years ago, the Austrian Communists had no more than a few thousand, mostly older members and virtually zero national relevance — think Democratic Socialists of America prior to 2016.

Instead of giving up, Dankl and the Young Greens decided to campaign with the KPÖ under the auspices of an electoral alliance named KPÖ PLUS (PLUS stands for Plattform Unabhängig und Solidarisch or Independent Solidarity Platform). At the time, the KPÖ had no more than a few thousand, mostly older members and virtually zero national relevance — think Democratic Socialists of America prior to 2016. Though it stood candidates in parliamentary elections, it rarely earned more than 1 percent of the vote.

Outside of Styria, there was little consistent activity between elections, apart from the odd standing meeting that some local chapters still held at the district office or pub. Nevertheless, for the young activists looking to engage in class politics, the KPÖ ultimately seemed like a good fit. And in light of Austria’s looming lurch to the right — which came to pass when ÖVP candidate Sebastian Kurz won the 2017 election and formed a coalition government with the FPÖ — they viewed precisely this kind of politics as the order of the day: according to the analysis of Dankl and other Young Greens at the time, “the rightward lurch in Austria can only be stopped by a strong movement from below.”

KPÖ PLUS only finished with 0.7 percent in the 2017 parliamentary election. However, the electoral campaign itself initiated a process of mutual learning between the old, historically aware Communist cadre and the young, motivated activists, paving the way for future cooperation. Shortly thereafter in 2018, the Young Greens refounded themselves as the Young Left. They also began receiving financial support from the KPÖ and now function as a de facto youth organization of the party.

In recent years, a number of current and former members of the Young Greens/Young Left — including Dankl — have also joined the KPÖ. The merging of these two milieus — of the knowledge and experience of the older generation with the energy and enthusiasm of the younger — has formed the basis of an emergent left-wing force that was desperately missing from the Austrian political scene. And now, the years of work that have gone into building this force are starting to bear fruit.

Styrian Model

The majority of the new KPÖ activists from Young Greens/Young Left circles are not from Styria and were not socialized politically in the Styrian party organization’s networks. Yet as most of them are too young to have firsthand experience of the infighting between the Styrian KPÖ and the national party leadership during the tumultuous 1990s, they have been able to more impartially adopt the far more successful approach of their Styrian comrades. Above all, this model entails a clear focus on issues that affect the day-to-day lives of all working people. Moreover, it’s maintained outside of election campaigns through a highly concrete and personal form of engagement.

This is precisely the model that Dankl has pursued in Salzburg since 2019, when he first ran in a municipal election in the state capital. Similar to former KPÖ Graz chairman Ernest Kaltenegger in the 1980s, Dankl focused his campaign predominantly on housing — a logical choice given that Salzburg has the second-highest rent prices of any Austrian city. In doing so, he managed to win 3.7 percent of the vote and a seat on the city council. This strategy was based on the simple recognition that the KPÖ can use the issue of housing not only to drive a wedge through local politics but also to attract strong support outside of the Left’s ever-dwindling core electorate.

By providing direct support for people in need and maintaining a focus on the issue of affordable housing over his four years as a city councilmember, Dankl has made his name as a genuine champion of the interests of working people.

As the only Communist member of the Salzburg city council, Dankl has placed great emphasis on grassroots work and personal contact with his constituents. Drawing on a long-established practice of the Styrian KPÖ, he holds regular office hours when people come by to discuss their everyday problems. Of the €1,800 he earns each month as a city councilmember, he donates €400 to a social fund set up to provide financial assistance to people in need.

Some leftists criticize this practice as a form of charity as opposed to politics. In fact, it is better understood as propaganda of the deed: by offering others concrete assistance with their own resources, KPÖ politicians have proven their credibility and earned voters’ trust. And although this practice will hardly bring about structural transformation in itself, it has helped Austria’s Communists in office understand which structural transformations are most urgently needed, which has in turn influenced the specific demands of the party’s electoral platforms.

By providing direct support in this manner and maintaining a focus on the issue of affordable housing over his four years as a city councilman, Dankl has made his name as a genuine champion of the interests of working people. To be sure, he and his party are far removed from having attracted the support of a broad majority of Austrians. Yet they have demonstrated that it is possible even in conservative regions to win people over to a left-wing project that unites reforms in the here and now with a vision of a different society. One can only hope that socialists elsewhere will take note.

Barcelona shul vandalized in second such incident in as many weeks

“Why do you kill in Palestine” was spray-painted outside a Chabad synagogue in the city.

By JNS

Vandals defaced a Jewish house of worship in Barcelona on Wednesday, in the second such incident in the city in less than 10 days.

Graffiti reading “Why do you kill in Palestine” was spray-painted outside a Chabad synagogue in the city.

The Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain condemned the act, saying in a statement that “attacking places of worship of Jewish men and women in Barcelona is a clear demonstration of antisemitism.”

The incident came nine days after the Great Synagogue of Barcelona was defaced with graffiti reading, “Free Palestine from the river to the sea.”

Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, the president of the Conference of European Rabbis, blamed that desecration on Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau’s decision to sever the city’s twinning agreement with Tel Aviv.

“The irresponsible decision of the mayor of Barcelona to unilaterally sever relations with the State of Israel has put the Jewish community in the city in real danger,” said Goldschmidt. “Every additional case of vandalism and bloodshed as a result of this unfortunate choice will be on her hands.”

The Lawfare Project announced last week the filing of the lawsuit against Colau, on behalf of the Barcelona Institute for Dialogue with Israel.

“It asserts that Ms. Colau acted beyond the scope of her authority by infringing on the Spanish government’s power to conduct foreign policy and violated applicable legal procedures,” the U.S.-based legal fund, which protects Jewish and Israeli civil and human rights, said in a statement.

Colau cited “repeated violations of human rights of the Palestinian population and noncompliance with United Nations resolutions” in justifying the decision to boycott the Jewish state, which ended a 24-year friendship between Barcelona and Tel Aviv.

Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen is currently on a diplomatic visit to Madrid.

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Antisemitic UN official says Israel ‘may be guilty’ of genocide

Claim of genocide comes from Francesca Albanese, who previously said that the U.S. is controlled by an evil Jewish cabal.

By Adina Katz, World Israel News

A prominent UN officially who has repeatedly promoted antisemitic conspiracy theories and justified deadly terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians said on Wednesday that she was investigating the possibility that Israel is actively committing genocide against the Palestinians.

UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese made the remarks during an anti-Israel conference in the UK, held on Israel’s 75th Independence Day.

Along with calling Israel an apartheid state and saying the country was guilty of ethnic cleansing, Albanese told an audience member that she was seriously investigating whether the country has committed genocide.

“This is something I intend to look into very carefully. There is the question of intent that needs to be absolutely explored, investigated, and documented. So I know that many use the term genocide to already qualify what’s happening,” Albanese said, according to a transcript of her remarks published by Israel National News.

“I personally refrain from it because I want to be absolutely sure of the argument when I make it. And I will get there. I will get there, because I see what’s happening and there is a level of persecution and combination of violations that speak to genocide.”

The term genocide refers to the systematic slaughter of a people. Since the 1967 Six Day War, the Arab population of the Gaza Strip has increased more than five-fold and more than 22-fold since Israel’s establishment in 1948, which would clearly indicate that no genocide has taken place.

When the State of Israel was established in 1948, hundreds of thousands of Arabs fled to neighboring countries, although some remained and gained citizenship. Today, more than 20 percent of Israeli citizens are of Arab descent.

According to the highest estimates from pro-Palestinian groups and terror organizations, a maximum of 15,000 Arabs – most of them soldiers from the armies of neighboring Arab states – were killed during the War of Independence.

Considering that there were some 950,000 Arabs present during the conflict and that most of those killed were engaged in combat with Israeli military groups, the deaths of 0.015% of the Arab population falls far short of the definition of a genocide.

Additionally, Israel is the only country in the Middle East that has recorded a positive growth rate among Arab Christians, with the community’s population growing by approximately 1 percent each year.

Notably, shortly after making comments which implied the murder of the three women from the Dee family was justified due to the unarmed mother and daughters being present in Judea and Samaria, Albanese said there was no non-violent solution for the Israeli-Arab conflict.

Albanese said that the UN and a two-state model were ineffective, so Palestinians should consider “moving away from the narrative of conflict and the call for negotiated solution.”

It’s unclear if Albanese was calling for additional terrorism, rather than diplomatic negotiations, as the answer to the Palestinian issue.

Albanese has said that the U.S. is controlled by an evil cabal of Jews, and that the European Union is beholden to Israel due to guilt from the Holocaust.

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‘Butt out’ and stop meddling in ‘Israel’s affairs’ – DeSantis slams Biden admin

Gov. Ron DeSantis blasts Biden administration’s comments disapproving of judicial reform, cabinet appointments, stresses that Israel can make her own decisions.

By Lauren Marcus, World Israel News

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is widely expected to announce his candidacy for the Republican nomination for president, slammed the Biden administration for its repeated criticisms of internal Israeli policies, saying the U.S. should stay out of the Jewish state’s decisions.

Speaking at a Jerusalem Post conference in Jerusalem on Thursday morning, DeSantis stressed that Israel is a sovereign state whose allies should trust her to make responsible choices.

President Joe Biden recently said he was “very concerned” about potential reforms to Israel’s judicial system and implied that he would not invite Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the White House “any time soon” as a punitive measure due to the legislation.

In December 2022, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Tom Nides suggested that the U.S. had attempted to prevent Netanyahu from appointing Religious Zionist politicians Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir to positions within his cabinet.

The Biden administration should “butt out of Israel’s affairs,” DeSantis said, to cheers from the audience at the conference.

“You’re a smart country. You can figure it out. We shouldn’t butt in to these important issues,” he added.

DeSantis also acknowledged a disproportionate focus on Israel within international entities, including the United Nations.

“The U.S. must defend Israel against disfavored treatment by the UN and agenda-driven international bodies…and we must reject those who reject Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state,” he said.

DeSantis noted that Israeli control of the capital city means that all Abrahamic faiths are able to access their holy sites.

“With Israeli sovereignty over the city of Jerusalem, people have the ability to visit those sites freely. That would not be true if it were in other hands,” DeSantis said.

At the conference, DeSantis signed a bill that stiffened penalties against antisemitic attacks and hate speech in Florida.

“We are doing what we can do in Florida to enhance the ability to hold people accountable when that really crosses the line into threatening conduct,” he said. “We are fighting back.”

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