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Austrian Sebastian Kurz, 31, set to be Europe’s first millennial leader after his party wins biggest slice of vote

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Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz (centre) head of the Austrian People's Party, arrives at an election party in Vienna on Sunday. Photo: AP
Reuters

Austria’s shift to the right in a parliamentary election has paved the way for young conservative star Sebastian Kurz to become the country’s next leader and opened a path for the resurgent far right to return to power.

The People’s Party, which named 31-year-old Foreign Minister Kurz its leader in May, secured a clear victory on Sunday with a hard line on immigration that left little space between it and the anti-Islam Freedom Party (FPO).

That party was founded by former Nazis and is a sister to France’s National Front and Germany’s AfD, both of which were also buoyed by voter concerns about Europe’s migration crisis in 2015.

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Kurz is well short of a majority and will probably need a coalition partner to govern. Having pledged to move away from often unworkable coalitions with the centre-left, like the one currently in power, an alliance with the FPO is likely.

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Sebastian Kurz, leader of the Austrian People’s Party, attends a celebration event in Vienna on Sunday. Photo: Xinhua
Sebastian Kurz, leader of the Austrian People’s Party, attends a celebration event in Vienna on Sunday. Photo: Xinhua
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