Austrian Chancellor Forced To Resign Amid Corruption ScandalAustrian Chancellor, Sebastian Kurz

Austrian Chancellor, Sebastian Kurz on Saturday announced his decision to step down from office following pressure on him to resign after he was implicated in a corruption scandal.

In a televised media statement which was monitored by Africa Today News, New York, Kurz revealed that he wanted to ‘make space to prevent chaos’.

‘We need stability,’ the 35-year-old conservative declared, adding it would be ‘irresponsible’ to allow Austria to ‘slide into months of chaos or gridlock’ while the EU member fights the pandemic.

Kurz maintained that he would nominate Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg as new chancellor, while he would stay on as the leader of his People’s Party (OeVP) and a lawmaker in parliament.

Vice-Chancellor and Greens leader Werner Kogler on Friday had asked the OeVP to name another chancellor, saying Kurz was ‘no longer fit for office’.

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Prosecutors had on Wednesday raided several locations linked to the OeVP and announced that Kurz and nine other individuals were under investigation over claims that government money was used in a corrupt deal to ensure positive media coverage.

Kurz however, has continually denied any wrongdoing, reiterating on Saturday that allegations against him were ‘false.’

‘I will be able to clarify it; I’m sure about that,’ he said calmly.

He said some of the text messages he wrote that got him into hot water were composed in ‘the heat of the moment’.

‘I’m just human with emotions and mistakes,’ he said.

By stepping down, Kurz avoids having to face a parliamentary no-confidence motion, which he was expected to lose after his junior coalition partner, the Greens, turned against him.

Africa Today News, New York recalls that in 2019, his coalition with the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) already collapsed after his ally became engulfed in a corruption scandal, but fresh elections once again saw Kurz’s OeVP come out on top.

In the latest scandal, according to prosecutors, the core allegation is that between 2016 and 2018, finance ministry resources were used to finance ‘partially manipulated opinion polls that served an exclusively party political interest’.

This correlates to the time period in which Kurz, already a government minister, took over the leadership of the OeVP and later that of the Alpine EU member at the helm of a coalition with the FPOe.

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK