The Green Tyrol

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The Greens - The Green Alternative Tyrol
Logo of the Tyrolean Greens
State party leader Ingrid Felipe
Club chairman Gebi Mair
Country manager Natasha Chmelar
founding 1989
Headquarters Müllerstraße 7 / 2nd floor
6020 Innsbruck
Seats in state parliaments
4/36

( LTW 2018 / MPs )
Number of members 398 (as of February 18, 2020)
Alignment Green politics
Website www.tirol.gruene.at
State elections 1989–2018
15%
10%
5%
0%

Die Grünen Tirol or Die Grünen - Die Grüne Alternative Tirol is the regional organization of the Austrian party Die Grünen - Die Grüne Alternative in Tirol .

The Greens Tyrol have been permanently represented in the Tyrolean state parliament since 1989 . In the 2013 state elections , they achieved 5 of the 36 seats in the Tyrolean state parliament and have since formed the Tyrolean state government together with the Tyrolean People's Party . The Platter II state government from 2013 to 2018 was followed by the Platter III state government , which has been in office since 2018. The party is with Ingrid Felipe the Governor Deputy and Gabriele Fischer social provincial government.

history

In the municipal council elections in Innsbruck on September 25, 1983, "Green" lists appeared for the first time. The Innsbruck Alternative List reached 2.87% and entered the municipal council with a mandate . Candidates were Hans Augustin, Astrid Kirchbaumer, Eva Kätzeis-Stangl, Rainer Patek and Sylvia Wallinger. The Stattclub, which emerged from the alternative “ Stattzeitung ” and was headed by Gerhard Fritz, achieved 1.1%.

For the first time in Tyrol it was possible to vote for the Greens in the entire state in the National Council election in 1986 , in which the party was the fourth to win the National Council for the first time . It reached 5.76% in Tyrol (with a national result of 4.82%).

In the state elections on March 12, 1989 , the Greens succeeded in jumping the 5 percent hurdle with 8.26% when they ran for the first time and thus entered the Tyrolean state parliament for the first time with three members, Eva Lichtenberger , Jutta Seethaler and Franz Klug.

In the municipal council elections in Innsbruck in 1989, two "green" lists competed. The ALI (Alternative List Innsbruck - The Green Alternative) achieved 10.63% and four mandates. It also provided a city council, which was alternately filled in the following years - with Rainer Patek, Uschi Schwarzl and Gerhard Fritz. The VGÖ- close “Green List Innsbruck” came to 4.19% and achieved a mandate ( Georg Willi ). Willi and Patek later initiated the agreement of the green parties.

The first federal congress of the Green Alternative , which took place in Tyrol, was the 5th federal congress from 13th to 15th July 1990 in Telfs . The program for the National Council election in 1990 was adopted.

The first government participation of the Tyrolean Greens (and the Greens throughout Austria ) was due to the proportional system in the Weingartner II regional government from 1994 to 1999, in which Eva Lichtenberger took over the office of regional councilor for environmental protection, waste management, water management and building law. The system of proportional representation was abolished during this government in 1998.

In June 1995 the 12th Federal Green Congress took place in Innsbruck. On the fringes of the congress, around 100 activists of the Tyrolean Greens are holding a blockade of the Brenner motorway with tree trunks in protest against the increasing transit traffic. As early as 1991, Tyrol's green alternative protested with an approved "bicycle and pedestrian demonstration" on the Inntal motorway near Volders against an alleged yielding of the Austrian government in the transit negotiations with the European Community.

In the first Austrian European Parliament election in 1996 , the Greens achieved 8.59% in Tyrol and 6.81% across Austria.

In the course of the state elections in 2003 , the Tyrolean Greens achieved their best result so far with 15.59% and the first time they achieved a Federal Council mandate , which Eva Konrad accepted.

Country spokesman

Previous Federal Councilors

Member of the state parliament

Web links

literature

  • Othmar Pruckner: A Brief History of the Greens . Überreuter, Vienna 2005, ISBN 3-8000-7124-X .
  • Franz Schandl, Gerhard Schattauer: The Greens in Austria. Development and consolidation of a political force. Promedia, Vienna 1996, ISBN 3-85371-103-0 .
  • Robert Kriechbaumer: Just an interlude (?) - The history of the Greens in Austria from the beginning until 2017 . Böhlau-Verlag, Vienna 2018, ISBN 978-3-205-20805-1 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Green state assembly: New state spokesman for the Greens. Retrieved April 3, 2020 .
  2. ^ The Green Austria. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  3. Imprint disclosure. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  4. ^ State of Tyrol - elections. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  5. ^ Office of the Tyrolean provincial government: Provincial Councilor Gabriele Fischer. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  6. gruenesarchiv: "Warmth of the living is planned away". Alternative list Innsbruck. In: 366 x green. September 21, 2016, accessed April 15, 2020 (German).
  7. a b c d e f g gruenesarchiv: Chronicle of the Green Alternative Austria from 1986. In: 366 x green. Accessed April 15, 2020 (German).
  8. gruenesarchiv: 268/366: Four alternative, one united mandate in Innsbruck. In: 366 x green. September 24, 2016, accessed April 15, 2020 (German).
  9. Dr. Evelin Lichtenberger, biography. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  10. ^ Salzburg24: Greens want to send a sign of life in the EU election. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  11. For 20 years protests on Tyrolean streets. In: The Standard . April 8, 2004, accessed April 16, 2020 .
  12. Ingrid Felipe: The new boss of the Greens. In: Courier . May 19, 2017, accessed April 15, 2020 .
  13. Georg Willi is again the state spokesman for the Tyrolean Greens. Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
  14. Schwitzer Lukas: Greens elected Hubert Weiler-Auer as state spokesman. June 11, 2016, accessed April 15, 2020 .
  15. Green: Schramm-Skoficz new national spokesperson. In: tirol.ORF.at. August 24, 2018. Retrieved August 29, 2018 .
  16. Altenweisl new green state spokesman. In: ORF.at . November 30, 2019, accessed December 1, 2019 .