The 2019 Styrian state election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect the members of the Landtag of Styria.
The conservative Austrian People's Party (ÃÂVP) was the clear winner of the election, winning 36.0% on a swing of 7.6 percentage points. This came to the detriment of the former largest party, the centre-left Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÃÂ), which lost six points and fell to second place. The Freedom Party of Austria (FPÃÂ) fell by nine points. The Greens made a strong showing, winning 12% and doubling their representation to six seats. The Communist Party of Austria (KPÃÂ) achieved their best result since re-entering the Landtag in 2005 with 6.0%. NEOS â The New Austria (NEOS) doubled its voteshare from the 2015 election, winning 5.4%, and entered the Landtag with two seats.
The outgoing government, a coalition of the SPàand ÃÂVP, was unusual in that it was headed by a member of the smaller party â Hermann Schützenhöfer of the ÃÂVP. With his party's success in the election, he was re-elected Governor by the Landtag at the head of a renewed ÃÂVPâÂÂSPàcoalition.
In the 2015 election, the SPÃÂâÂÂÃÂVP government suffered major losses (âÂÂ9.0 and âÂÂ8.7 points respectively) to the FPà(+16.1 points), with all three parties finishing within a 2.5 percentage point margin of one another. Afterwards, in line with a promise to step down if the SPàfell below 30% of votes, Governor Franz Voves announced his resignation. With the SPàand ÃÂVP planning to continue their coalition, the larger SPàwas expected to retain the governorship. However, after several days of negotiations, the government announced that Voves would be succeeded by ÃÂVP leader Hermann Schützenhöfer. This was received poorly by opposition parties and the federal SPàalike, who criticised it as a breach of political convention. The Styrian SPàclaimed it had been done to prevent the ÃÂVP from defecting and forming a coalition with the FPÃÂ.
In May 2019, the Ibiza affair led to the collapse of the federal government between the ÃÂVP and FPÃÂ. The September 2019 federal election took place two months ahead of the Styrian election and saw substantial losses for the FPÃÂ and SPÃÂ, and gains for the ÃÂVP and Greens.
The 48 seats of the Landtag of Styria are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. 40 of the seats are distributed between four multi-member constituencies. For parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must win at least one seat in a constituency directly. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Hare quota, with eight leveling seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.