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Analysis

80 years on from the Anschluss, Austrian populism is remarkably stable

The far-right Freedom Party is stronger than at any point in its history

March 11, 2018 09:47
Adolf Hitler receives an ovation and salute in Austria’s parliament after the Anschluss fused the country with Germany in March 1938
2 min read

Eighty years have now passed since the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany, a move known as the Anschluss. It marked a critical part of Hitler’s Heim ins Reich (“Back home to the Reich”) foreign policy that sought to bring ethnic Germans back together under a Greater Germany.

It was also a moment that had major consequences for Austria’s Jewish community, which faced an almost immediate campaign of violence and harassment that culminated in the Kristallnacht pogrom a few months later and deportations to concentration camps.

Clearly, the situation in Austria today is very different from the 1930s. Few people today talk about reunification with Germany.

Public support in democratic institutions is strong. The European Union, too, has shown a clear determination to monitor antisemitism closely, with a major report on antisemitism across Europe due this year.