46 percent for new elections in Austria
72 percent of Austrians believe that the government is not doing enough to prepare Austria for rising energy prices and a possible gas shortage. Only 20 percent consider the initiatives of turquoise-green to be sufficient.
32 percent would vote for government parties
And the two governing parties now have less than a third of the population behind them. In the Sunday question, the ÖVP is at 22 percent (no change compared to June), the Greens lose two points to 10 percent. The SPÖ extends its lead by two points to 29 percent. The FPÖ is hot on the heels of the ÖVP with 21 percent (plus 1). The NEOS come to 11 percent (plus 1), the anti-vaccination party MFG to 4 percent (minus 2).
Nehammer in front on Chancellor question
In the fictional chancellor question, ÖVP incumbent Karl Nehammer still holds 18 percent, followed by SPÖ leader Pamela Rendi-Wagner with 16 percent (minus 2) and FPÖ chairman Herbert Kickl with 13 percent (minus 1). NEOS frontwoman Beate Meinl-Reisinger and Grünen boss Werner Kogler each have 6 percent.
Unique Research interviewed 800 people over the phone and online. The range of fluctuation is plus/minus 3.5 percent.