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Oct 22, 2025

Austrian deportation row heats up as parties trade accusations

Austrian deportation row heats up as parties trade accusations
Austria’s simmering debate over asylum enforcement flared on 22 October when Freedom Party (FPÖ) Secretary-General Michael Schnedlitz accused the governing People’s Party (ÖVP) of “total deportation failure”, after ÖVP General-Secretary Niko Marchetti blamed the FPÖ for an alleged procedural error in the removal of a convicted Afghan offender.

In a sharply worded press release, Schnedlitz highlighted that the offender’s first conviction occurred in 2017 when ÖVP politician Wolfgang Sobotka, not FPÖ leader Herbert Kickl, was Interior Minister. He argued that current Interior Minister Gerhard Karner has failed to enforce deportations despite new fast-track rules adopted in March.

The spat underscores the political stakes ahead of the 2026 general election and may influence forthcoming legislation to set annual ceilings for family-reunification visas. For global-mobility practitioners the dispute is more than political theatre: it signals a hardening stance that could translate into shorter appeal windows for negative asylum and residence decisions, potentially affecting corporate transferees who transition from humanitarian status to Red-White-Red permits.

Employers should monitor draft amendments to the Asylgesetz expected in the winter session; early versions seen by legal analysts include a controversial Article 36a that would pause certain residence procedures during national-security emergencies—a clause that could create processing backlogs.

Stakeholders are advised to engage with industry associations and update relocation timelines to account for possible policy volatility in early 2026.
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