On the occasion of the summer holidays, the parliament of Austria made up the balance: in the past period there were 40 sessions that lasted a total of 184 hours and led to 53 laws.
The equivalent in days is 7.6. If you take eight hours of a working day, the National Council has spent 23 days with meetings. In the meantime, a total of 20 order calls were distributed. Most written questions came from the FPö (824 to the beginning of May) in the previous legislative period, including many to deal with Corona Pandemie.
A total of 38 government templates were introduced in the past parliamentary year, 68 legal applications, 338 decision -making applications and nine applications from committees. The FPö wanted to retire confidence in his newspaper as a ‘transitional government’ with two no-confidence requests from the black-green coalition.
At that time there were 53 legal decisions. That is considerably less than in the first year of the previous legislative period (2019/2020). At that time, however, many were affected because of the Corona Pandemie, this high number is unusual. This time the MPs unanimously lasted 28.3 percent.
More armchairs needed
Questions to the government dealt with road construction projects, the neutrality of the state budget and the neutrality of Austria. “The conference began with the constitutional session of the newly chosen National Council on October 24, 2025. This brought various premieres: 73 new members of parliament moved to the National Council. 61 – and so a third of all Mandatars – were first in the High House (… =),” The parliamentary directorate looked back in an broadcast.
“For the first time, the Neo’s took a seat on the government bank. And there it was almost narrow: because of the composition of the government with three parties and various state secretaries, more seats needed. New armchairs solved the problem without further aligning.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.