1945 Austrian legislative election

1945 Austrian legislative election

← 1930 25 November 1945 1949 →

All 165 seats in the National Council of Austria
83 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Leopold Figl Adolf Schärf Johann Koplenig
Party ÖVP SPÖ KPÖ
Seats won 85 76 4
Popular vote 1,602,227 1,434,898 174,257
Percentage 49.80% 44.60% 5.42%

Results of the election, showing seats won by constituency and nationwide. Constituencies are shaded according to the first-place party.

Chancellor before election

Karl Renner (Acting)
SPÖ

Elected Chancellor

Leopold Figl
ÖVP

Parliamentary elections were held in Austria on 25 November 1945, the first after World War II. The elections were held according to the Austrian election law of 1929, with all citizens at least 21 years old eligible to vote,[1] however former Nazis were banned from voting, official sources putting their numbers at around 200,000.[2]

The Austrian People's Party, comprising elements of the prewar Christian Social Party under the leadership of Leopold Figl, won a decisive victory, receiving just under half of the vote and 85 of the 165 seats in the National Council. With an outright majority of two seats, the ÖVP could have governed alone. However, Figl retained the three-party grand coalition alongside the Socialists and Communists. The Communists, who had been equally represented in the government of Figl's predecessor, Socialist Karl Renner, since the end of the war, only received one cabinet post.[3]

On 20 December 1945 the Federal Assembly unanimously elected incumbent Chancellor Renner as President. Renner swore in Figl as new chancellor on the same day.[4][5]

The Communists won only four seats, which some blamed on the conduct of the Red Army in the Soviet occupied zone of Austria.[6] This proved to be the beginning of a long decline for the Communists, though they stayed in the chamber until May 1959.