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It would have needed a coalition partner to govern, but Nehammer ruled out governing with FPO leader Herbert Kickl, meaning no potential coalition partner for the FPO was forthcoming.

Herbert Kickl (centre) is the head of Austria’s far-right Freedom Party, who won the September election with 29 per cent of the vote. Source: AAP, EPA / Filip Singer
Nehammer’s OVP came second with 26 per cent, while the centre-left SPO gained 21 per cent in September.
Wealth and inheritance taxes, pensions as well as different views on how to reign in the country’s ballooning budget deficit have been cited as the main sticking points in the coalition talks.
What happens now?
Support for the FPO has grown since the last election. It holds a lead of more than 10 points over the People’s Party and the SPO, opinion polls show.

Karl Nehammer had been tasked with forming a government by Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen. Source: AAP, AP / Heinz-Peter Bader
That poses a dilemma for Australian President Van der Bellen, who has expressed reservations about Kickl becoming chancellor.
“We know what threatens to happen now. An FPO-OVP government with a right-wing extremist chancellor that will endanger our democracy on many points,” Babler said.
“Alexander Van der Bellen bears a significant share of the responsibility for the chaos that has arisen and the time that has been lost … After today’s events, he is under pressure to act.”