Austrian President Heinz Fischer coasted to a second six-year term

Heinz-FischerWith exit polls showing he captured 78 percent of the vote, Austrian President Heinz Fischer coasted to election to a second six-year term on Sunday.

The Times of London has reported that far-right candidate Barbara Rosenkranz won barely 15 percent of the vote. She had called for lifting a ban on voicing neo-Nazi sentiments, but later retracted the statement, and questioned Austria's laws forbidding denial of the Holocaust.

Wolfgang Fellner, editor of Oesterreich, an Austrian daily newspaper, told the Times, "Grandma Rosenkranz would have presented a horror show as president of Austria."

Rosenkranz's colleague Heinz-Christian Strache, leader of the far-right Freedom Party, blamed her poor performance on an "unprecedented media witch-hunt against a very good candidate and her family".

Strache will seek to shift the party's focus from questioning the law banning Nazi ideology and denial of the Holocaust to resisting immigration by Muslims and East Europeans, the Times said.

Analyst Peter Hajek told The New York Times, "This was a defeat for Rosenkranz, for the Freedom Party and for its leader, Heinz-Christian Strache."

The London Times also said that the mainstream conservative party, the Austrian People's Party, along with the center-right People's Party and the Greens, did not field candidates because they believed Fischer couldn't be beaten.

Compared with 71.6 percent in 2004, the polling institute ARGE reported only 48.1 percent of those eligible to vote turned out. (With Inputs from Agencies)

.

Technical View on Stocks
Anil ManghnaniRajat BoseVijay BhambwaniAmbareesh BaligaPrakash GabaSudarshan SukhaniAshwani GujralAshu Madan



Check out More news from Telecom Sector :: Pharmaceutical Sector :: Auto Sector :: Infrastructure :: Real Estate