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Senior Austrian conservative quits after conviction for misuse of office

By Thomson Reuters May 4, 2026 | 11:39 AM

VIENNA, May 4 (Reuters) – The parliamentary leader of Austria’s ruling conservatives, August Woeginger, stepped down on Monday moments after a court convicted him of misuse of office and handed him a seven-month suspended prison sentence ​and a 43,200 euro ($50,600) fine.

The case centred on Woeginger’s intervention on ‌behalf of a mayor from his party who was applying for the position of head of the local tax office in Braunau am Inn, on the German border.

The ruling could be a watershed moment in Austrian politics as it penalises officials allegedly involved in appointing a party ‌loyalist ​over a more qualified candidate, in a country where ⁠two centrist parties carved up ⁠most top administrative posts between them for decades after World War Two.

Woeginger, a top figure in Chancellor Christian Stocker’s Austrian People’s Party (OVP), has maintained his innocence and said he never meant to exert undue influence, but also that ​in retrospect he would not do the same thing again.

“While I still expect to be acquitted on appeal, I will nevertheless – regardless of further legal ⁠steps – resign from my post of OVP parliamentary ⁠leader with immediate effect,” Woeginger said in a statement, adding ​that he planned to stay on as an OVP lawmaker.

Woeginger had spoken about the ​mayor’s candidacy to the then top civil servant in the finance ‌ministry, OVP loyalist Thomas Schmid, who allegedly worked with two members of a committee that reviewed candidates for the job to promote the mayor’s candidacy.

Those two committee members were co-defendants in the case and both were convicted of misuse of office ⁠and perjury, and handed the same seven-month suspended sentence as Woeginger along with smaller fines. Schmid turned state witness in this and other cases involving his former OVP allies.

The ⁠mayor was awarded the ‌job over a better qualified candidate, who filed a ⁠complaint.

The ruling is a blow to the OVP, which has ​stayed in ‌power since its then-Chancellor Sebastian Kurz was forced to ​quit in 2021 ⁠over corruption allegations he denies. The OVP now heads a three-party coalition in which each member is trailing the far-right Freedom Party in opinion polls.

“It is a verdict at first instance with a very harsh sentence,” Chancellor Stocker said in a statement. “Personally, I would have wished August Woeginger an acquittal.”

($1 = 0.8538 euros)

(Reporting by Francois Murphy; ​Editing by Susan Fenton)