"Austria is a democratic republic. Its laws emanate from the
people".
Thus reads Article 1 of the Federal Constitutional Act.
Federal Constitution
The Austrian Federal Constitution was passed by the Constituent National
Assembly on October 1, 1920.
The formulation of the Federal Constitution was the work of representatives
of the political parties, experts from what was then the State Chancellery,
but most notably Professor Hans Kelsen (1881-1973).
The Federal Constitution was amended by the 'Nationalrat' on December 7,
1929. The purpose of this amendment was to grant wider powers to the Federal
President.
The Constitutional Transition Act passed by the Provisional State
Government on May 1, 1945 brought the Federal Constitutional back into force
with the 1929 amendments.
Austria is a federal republic comprised of independent federal
states:
- Burgenland
- Carinthia
- Lower Austria
- Salzburg
- Styria
|
- Tyrol
- Upper Austria
- Vienna
- Vorarlberg
|
The territory of the federal republic is made up of the territories of the
federal states, constituting a uniform monetary, economic and custom entity.
The federal capital and the seat of the supreme federal authorities is
Vienna.
The Republic of Austria covers a surface area of 84,000 square kilometers.
It has a population of approximately 8 million.
All citizens of Austria are equal before the law. There are no distinctions
of birth, gender, status, class or religion.
German is the official language of the Republic of Austria, but specific
rights have been accorded by federal law to the recognized linguistic
minorities.
The colours of the Republic
of Austria are red, white and red.
The Austrian Republic's coat-of-arms consists of a single-headed black
eagle with golden arms and red tongue. Its chest is covered by a red
escutcheon with a silver cross-bar. The eagle bears a golden coronet with
three visible merlons. Its claws are banded by a severed iron chain. In its
right claw it holds a golden sickle with the blade turned inwards; in its left
claw a golden hammer.
Federal and State Authorities
In the federal states the State
Governor exercises federal executive power (indirect federal
administration) where no separate federal authority exists (direct federal
administration).
In matters pertaining to indirect federal administration, the State
Governor is subject to directives from the Federal Government and individual
Federal Ministers.
All state legislation enacted by the state legislatures must, immediately after their enactment, be made known to the
Federal Chancellery before the State Governor publishes it.
Each state assembly may be dissolved by the Federal
President at the request of the Federal Government and with the
consent of the 'Bundesrat'.
This dissolution may, however, be enforced only once on the same grounds.
The History of the Republic
On March 4, 1933 parliamentary democracy in Austria was suspended. From
March 13, 1938 onwards Austria was occupied by the German Reich and
thus prevented from exercising its sovereign power. It remained part of the
Third Reich until April 1945. As had been the case with the First
Republic (1918-1938), it was the political parties that founded the Second
Republic after Austria's liberation in April 1945.
The three anti-fascist parties - the Socialist Party of Austria (SPÖ, now
Social Democratic Party of Austria), the Christian Social Party (now Austrian
People's Party (ÖVP), and the Communist Party of Austria (KPÖ) reached an agreement on the formation of a Provisional State Government headed by Karl
Renner (1870-1950) and on the proclamation of Austria's independence.
This Declaration of Independence was proclaimed on April 27, 1945. The
first two Articles read as follows:
Article I: The democratic Republic of Austria is restored and shall be
instituted in the spirit of the Constitution of 1920.
Article II: The annexation enforced on the Austrian people in 1938 is
declared null and void.
The Austrian Constitution is based on the principles of a republican,
democratic and federal state, the principle of the rule of law, and the
principle of the separation of legislative and executive powers and the
separation of jurisdiction
and administration.
The basic
rights and freedoms guaranteed in the Federal Constitution were first
accorded more than a century ago.
The provisions of the European Convention on the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms supplement Austria's constitutional law.