Viktor Klima
Viktor Klima (born
4 June 1947), a
Social Democratic Austrian
politician, was Federal
Chancellor of Austria (
Bundeskanzler) from
1997 till his resignation in
2000.
Born in
Schwechat,
Lower Austria, Klima started working for the
OMV oil company in
1969 and remained with the company up to the beginning of his political career in
1992, in his later years serving as a member of their management board. Although Klima was then unknown to the majority of Austrians, in
1992 Federal Chancellor
Franz Vranitzky made him Minister of Transportation and Nationalised Industry, a position Klima held till
1996, when he became Minister of Finance for a year.
In
1997, upon Vranitzky's resignation, Klima was sworn in as Federal Chancellor of Austria, having renewed the grand coalition between his own party (
SPÖ) and the
Austrian People's Party (
ÖVP), with
Wolfgang Schüssel serving as his Vice-Chancellor.
Probably influenced by other European leaders such as
Tony Blair, under Klima's premiership the Austrian Social Democrats altogether renounced their allegiance to
Marxism and thus to their own political roots and very clearly continued their move from the political left towards the centre. For example, further
privatisations took place, and several public services that had been subsumed under the policies of the
welfare state were tentatively reduced. As a consequence, a high percentage of the party's traditional
working class clientèle, dissatisfied with Klima and his party, left to support
Jörg Haider's right-wing
Freedom Party. However, just as his predecessor Vranitzky, Klima repeatedly and publicly announced that under no circumstances was he prepared to enter into a coalition with Haider's party.
Following the
elections of 1999, Viktor Klima stepped down in February
2000 and was succeeded by
Schüssel, who formed a coalition government with the Freedom Party. A few weeks later Klima took up a senior management position with
Volkswagen in
Argentina. He at the same time gave up his post as party chairman of the SPÖ, which he had also held since
1997, and was succeeded in this capacity by
Alfred Gusenbauer, the new leader of the opposition.
Klima has been married twice. He has a grown-up son by his first marriage. His second wife, from whom he is separated, is primary school teacher-turned-socialite
Sonja Klima. Klima used to be a heavy
smoker and was probably one of the last politicians who smoked in public. During his premiership he was even hospitalized due to a
nicotine-related illness.
Preceded by: Franz Vranitzky | Chancellor of Austria 1997–2000 | Succeeded by: Wolfgang Schüssel |
SPÖ Party Chairman 1997–2000 | Succeeded by: Alfred Gusenbauer |
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