List of Members of the Carinthian State Parliament (31st legislative period)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Allocation of seats in the Carinthian state parliament from 2013
14th
5
5
6th
4th
2
14th 6th 4th 
A total of 36 seats

This list of members of the Carinthian state parliament (31st legislative period) lists all members of the Carinthian state parliament in the 31st legislative period (as of February 20, 2014). The legislative period began with the constituent session of the state parliament on March 28, 2013. On the day of the constitution, the state parliament elected the state government Kaiser I , which replaced the state government Dörfler II .

history

After the state elections in 2013 , 14 of the 36 seats were held by the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ), which gained three seats and was able to achieve a relative majority in a state election in Carinthia for the first time since 1994. The second strongest party was Die Freiheitlichen in Kärnten (FPK), which had almost an absolute majority in 2009 and, after a landslide defeat in the 2013 election, only achieved six seats. The Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) was able to hold its five mandates, the Green Carinthia (GRÜNE) more than doubled its mandate from two to five mandates. For the first time in 2013, the Stronach (TS) team made it into the state parliament with four mandates, and the Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZÖ) also won two mandates.

After the state elections, the SPÖ, ÖVP and the Greens formed a joint coalition that has a two-thirds majority in the Carinthian state parliament with 24 seats. This enables the three parties to change state constitutional laws and, for example, abolish the proportional representation system.

In July 2017, Johanna Trodt-Limpl and Wilhelm Korak, the last two federal state parliament members of the BZÖ, left the party.

Functions

Landtag President

After the electoral defeat of the Carinthian Freedom Party, there were major changes in the Landtag presidium of the Carinthian Landtag, whereby the positions of the Landtag President were assigned according to the proportional system.

  • Instead of the previous state parliament president Josef Lobnig (FPK), the previous SPÖ club chairman Reinhart Rohr was elected as the new state parliament president with 24 of 36 votes.
  • As in the previous legislative period, the SPÖ MP Rudolf Schober took over the role of 2nd President of the State Parliament . He was confirmed in office with 25 valid votes.
  • The previous 1st President of the State Parliament, Lobnig, was elected to the office of 3rd President of the State Parliament. In his election he was only able to get 13 valid votes.

Member of the state parliament

As a result of the upheaval following the 2013 state elections, 20 of the 36 state parliament members were represented in the Carinthian state parliament for the first time at the beginning of the legislative period. Only eight MPs were female. Of the parties, the Carinthian Greens had the highest number of women MPs with three women and, at 60%, the highest proportion of women of all parties. The SPÖ provided two female MPs (14%), the ÖVP (20%), the BZÖ (50%) and the Stronach team (25%) one each. No MPs in the FPK were female at the beginning of the legislative period. With Zalka Kuchling (GREEN) and Alois Dolinar (TS) there are two representatives of the Slovenian minority in the state parliament.

Surname fraction Remarks
Anton Hannes FPÖ resigned from the Carinthian state parliament on December 31, 2014
Dolinar Alois TS sworn in as successor to Gerhard Köfer on March 28, 2013 , resignation from mandate in July 2013
Ebner Manfred SPÖ sworn in on March 28, 2013 as the successor to a member of the SPÖ government
Gaggl Herbert ÖVP
Hueter Ferdinand ÖVP
Holub Rolf GREEN Waiver of mandate after being elected to the state government on March 28, 2013
Johann Michael GREEN on March 28, 2013, succeeding Rolf Holub sworn in
Emperor Peter SPÖ Waiver of mandate after being elected to the state government on March 28, 2013
Kochl Klaus SPÖ
Köfer Gerhard TS Waiver of mandate after being elected to the state government on March 28, 2013
Korak Wilhelm Leaving the Carinthian BZÖ in July 2017
Kuchling Zalka GREEN
Liver care provider Reinhard GREEN
Leikam Günter SPÖ
Lesjak Barbara GREEN
Leyroutz Christian FPÖ
Praise Joseph FPÖ
Malle Markus ÖVP on 28 March 2013 as the successor to Wolfgang Waldner sworn in
Obex-Mischitz Ines SPÖ
Pirolt Franz FPÖ sworn in on March 28, 2013 as the successor to Christian Ragger
Prasch Hartmut TS
Prettner Beate SPÖ Waiver of mandate after being elected to the state government on March 28, 2013
Primus Hannes SPÖ
Ragger Christian SPÖ Waiver of mandate after being elected to the state government on March 28, 2013
Redecsy David SPÖ
Reinhart pipe SPÖ
Rohrer Waltraud SPÖ
Rutter Martin TS sworn in for Alois Dolinar on July 18, 2013
Schabus Karin ÖVP
Schalli Siegfried FPÖ Not a member of the FPÖ Club, until October 30, 2013 member of the Stronach team
Schautzer Sabina GREEN
Scherwitzl Andreas SPÖ sworn in on March 28, 2013 as the successor to a member of the SPÖ government
Schober Rudolf SPÖ
Seiser Herwig SPÖ
Staudacher Christoph FPÖ
Strauss Jakob SPÖ
Theuermann Isabella FPÖ Change from the Stronach team to the FPÖ club on December 13, 2017
Deeply Alfred SPÖ
Trettenbrein Harald FPÖ
Trodt-Limpl Johanna Leaving the Carinthian BZÖ in July 2017
Waldner Wolfgang ÖVP Waiver of mandate after being elected to the state government on March 28, 2013
Wieser Franz ÖVP
Zellot Roland FPÖ since February 5, 2015 as the successor to Hannes Anton
Zoppoth Josef SPÖ

Individual evidence

  1. Kleine Zeitung Online ( Memento from September 13, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) “Three-party coalition sealed”, March 26, 2013
  2. a b c orf.at: Out for BZÖ in the Carinthian state parliament . Article dated July 20, 2017, accessed July 20, 2017.
  3. orf.at - new managing director for Podersdorf Tourismus . Article dated November 13, 2014, accessed November 3, 2015.
  4. orf.at: Isabella Theuermann changes to the FPÖ . Article dated December 13, 2017, accessed December 13, 2017.

Web links