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Rosenkranz, MP of Austria's Freedom Party (FPOe), stands in the plenary of the Austrian Parliament in Vienna. /Alex Halada/AFP
Austrian lawmakers on Thursday elected for the first time a far-right politician as parliament president despite the Jewish community criticizing the nominee for having paid "homage to Nazi criminals".
The far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) won national polls for the first time last month, gaining almost a third of the votes, though it has been unable to find partners to form a government.
But as the strongest party, it nominated lawmaker Walter Rosenkranz, 62, a lawyer and a former presidential candidate, as the parliament's president.
In parliament's first session following last month's national elections, Rosenkranz was elected with 100 out of 162 valid votes that were cast, current parliament president Wolfgang Sobotka said.
The chairman of Austria's Freedom Party (FPOe), Herbert Kickl, and other MPs applaud as Rosenkranz is elected. /Alex Halada/AFP
Rosenkranz, who has been widely criticised for being a member of a far-right student fraternity known for its strident pan-German nationalism, was elected in a secret ballot.
In a debate before the vote, conservative Chancellor Karl Nehammer -- who hopes to head another government -- said his party was "committed to the customs and traditions" of parliament of the strongest party nominating the president.
FPOe leader Herbert Kickl praised Rosenkranz for his "loyalty to democracy, the constitution and the rule of law".
Ahead of the vote, Oskar Deutsch, president of IKG that represents Vienna's Jewish community, expressed his indignation in an open letter to parliament members, describing Rosenkranz as someone from the "revisionist camp", who "pays outright homage to Nazi criminals".
On Tuesday, Austria's president assigned incumbent Chancellor Karl Nehammer the task of forming a new government after all other parties declined to collaborate with the leader of the far-right Freedom Party, which recently won a national election for the first time.
Earlier, on October 9, Austria's president stated that he could not assign the far-right Freedom Party (FPO) the responsibility of forming a government following its general election victory because no party was willing to govern alongside it. Instead, he suggested that the FPO and the next two largest parties should work together to resolve the "stalemate."
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