Reuters Photojournalism
Our day's top images, in-depth photo essays and offbeat slices of life. See the best of Reuters photography. See more | Photo caption
Ethiopia's salt trails
For centuries merchants have traveled to Ethiopia to collect salt from the surface of the vast desert basin. Slideshow
Sponsored Links
Three of five Austrians want strong man as leader: poll
VIENNA |
VIENNA (Reuters) - Three out of five Austrians want a "strong man" to lead the country and two out of five think things were not all bad under Adolf Hitler, according to a survey released on Friday.
Timed to coincide with the 75th anniversary next week of Austria's annexation by Nazi Germany, the Market Institut poll for newspaper Der Standard found 61 percent of respondents, mostly the elderly - liked the idea of a strong man as leader.
That was more than in previous polls. One in 2008 found just a fifth of Austrians could imagine having "a strong leader who does not have to worry about a parliament or elections", the paper said.
Many Austrians wanted a union, or Anschluss, with Germany in 1938, but several maintained for decades afterwards that their country was Hitler's first victim despite the cheering crowds that greeted the Nazi leader.
A few Austrians put up resistance that grew over time.
In the latest poll, 53 percent thought the "Anschluss" was voluntary and 46 percent saw Austria as a victim.
Only 15 percent of the 502 people surveyed thought Austria should have fought annexation, while 42 percent thought a war with Germany would have made matters worse and 43 percent said it would have made no difference.
Forty-two percent said "not everything was bad under Hitler" while 57 percent saw no good aspects to the Hitler era.
The poll suggests Austria's centrist coalition of Social Democrats and conservatives faces a substantial proportion of voters skeptical about the democratic principles the neutral country has espoused since World War Two.
Polls show right-wing parties are poised to do well in elections due by September, although the coalition parties remain in the lead.
(Reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by Jon Hemming)
- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints
1) Der Standard is part of Austria’s MSM. They are beating the left-wing drum just like most other papers. They love the left and hate anything that smells even remotely “right wing”. If you take them as reliable source, you’re already lost.
2) The doubling number of anti-Semitic incident reports has the same reasons as all across the EU: uncontrolled immigration of mohammedans and the left wing protecting them all the time.
3) Police will stand by because, as long as the “neo-nazi” hooligans (which are a fringe minority compared to violent left wing European protest tourists who have been rioting and protesting regularly, especially in Vienna -check the Votiv Church stand-off) abuse the rabbi only verbally, there’s no law that allows them to interfere. They’re not assaulting him, Austrian LEOs have every clear and strict rules in such regards.
4) 502 people were asked, from more than 8 million inhabitants. Very representative. Not. Plus, it’s Der Standard, it’s likely they forged it anyway.
So get your facts straight.




Follow Reuters