List of Chancellors of Austria
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Austria |
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This is a list of Chancellors of Austria since the establishment of that office in 1918.
List of officeholders (1918–present)
Political Party: SDAPÖ/SPÖ CS/ÖVP VF NSDAP None
№ | Chancellor (Birth–Death) |
Portrait | Term of office | Party | Cabinet | Vice-Chancellor (Party) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
№ | Coalition | ||||||||
1 | Karl Renner (1870–1950) |
30 October 1918 | 21 October 1919 | Social Democratic Workers' Party | 1 2 |
SDAPÖ – CS – GDVP | 2: Jodok Fink (CS) | ||
№ | Chancellor (Birth–Death) |
Portrait | Term of office | Party | Cabinet | Vice-Chancellor (Party) | |||
№ | Coalition | ||||||||
(1) | Karl Renner (1870–1950) |
21 October 1919 | 7 July 1920 | Social Democratic Workers' Party | 3 | SDAPÖ – CS – GDVP | Jodok Fink (CS) | ||
2 | Michael Mayr (1864–1922) |
7 July 1920 | 20 November 1920 | Christian Social Party | 1 | CS – SDAPÖ | Ferdinand Hanusch (SDAPÖ) until 22 Oct 1920 Eduard Heinl (CS) from 22 Oct 1920 | ||
20 November 1920 | 21 June 1921 | 2 | Walter Breisky (CS) | ||||||
3 | Johann Schober (1874–1932) |
21 June 1921 | 26 January 1922 | non-partisan (Beamter) |
1 | CS – GDVP | Walter Breisky (CS) | ||
— | Walter Breisky (1871–1944) Acting Chancellor |
26 January 1922 | 27 January 1922 | Christian Social Party | CS | — | |||
(3) | Johann Schober (1874–1932) |
27 January 1922 | 31 May 1922 | non-partisan (Beamter) |
2 | CS – GDVP | Walter Breisky (CS) | ||
4 | Ignaz Seipel (1876–1932) |
31 May 1922 | 20 November 1924 | Christian Social Party | 1 2 3 |
CS – GDVP | Leopold Waber (GDVP) | ||
5 | Rudolf Ramek (1881–1941) |
20 November 1924 | 20 October 1926 | Christian Social Party | 1 2 |
CS – GDVP | Felix Frank (GDVP) | ||
(4) | Ignaz Seipel (1876–1932) |
20 October 1926 | 4 May 1929 | Christian Social Party | 4 5 |
CS – GDVP – Landbund | Franz Dinghofer (GDVP) until 19 May 1927 Karl Hartleb (L) from 19 May 1927 | ||
6 | Ernst Streeruwitz (1874–1952) |
4 May 1929 | 26 September 1929 | Christian Social Party | 1 | CS – Landbund | Vinzenz Schumy (L) | ||
(3) | Johann Schober (1874–1932) |
26 September 1929 | 30 September 1930 | non-partisan (Beamter) |
3 | CS | Carl Vaugoin (CS) | ||
7 | Carl Vaugoin (1873–1949) |
30 September 1930 | 4 December 1930 | Christian Social Party | 1 | CS | Richard Schmitz (CS) | ||
8 | Otto Ender (1875–1960) |
4 December 1930 | 20 June 1931 | Christian Social Party | 1 | CS | Johann Schober | ||
9 | Karl Buresch (1878–1936) |
20 June 1931 | 20 May 1932 | Christian Social Party | 1 2 |
CS – Landbund | Johann Schober until 29 Jan 1922 Franz Winkler (L) from 29 Jan 1922 | ||
10 | Engelbert Dollfuss (1892–1934) |
20 May 1932 | 21 September 1933 | Christian Social Party | 1 | CS – Landbund – Heimatblock | Franz Winkler (L) | ||
(10) | 21 September 1933 | 1 May 1934 | Fatherland Front | 2 | Austrofascist Dictatorship | Emil Fey (H) | |||
№ | Chancellor (Birth–Death) |
Portrait | Term of office | Party | Cabinet | Vice-Chancellor (Party) | |||
№ | Coalition | ||||||||
(10) | Engelbert Dollfuss (1892–1934) |
1 May 1934 | 25 July 1934 | Fatherland Front | 2 | Austrofascist Dictatorship | Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg (H) | ||
11 | Kurt Schuschnigg (1897–1977) |
29 July 1934 | 11 March 1938 | Fatherland Front | 1 2 3 4 |
Austrofascist Dictatorship | Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg (H) until 14 May 1936 Eduard Baar-Baarenfels (H) 14 May – 3 Nov 1936 Ludwig Hülgerth (VF) from 3 Nov 1936 | ||
12 | Arthur Seyss-Inquart (1892–1946) |
11 March 1938 | 13 March 1938 | National Socialist German Workers' Party | 1 | National-Socialist Dictatorship | Edmund Glaise von Horstenau (NSDAP) | ||
Austria annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938. Independence restored in 1945. | |||||||||
№ | Chancellor (Birth–Death) |
Portrait | Term of office | Party | Cabinet | Vice-Chancellor (Party) | |||
№ | Elected | Coalition | |||||||
(1) | Karl Renner (1870–1950) |
27 April 1945 | 20 December 1945 | Socialist Party | 4 | — | SPÖ – ÖVP – KPÖ | Secs. of State without Portfolio: Leopold Figl (ÖVP) Johann Koplenig (KPÖ) Adolf Schärf (SPÖ) | |
13 | Leopold Figl (1902–1965) |
20 December 1945 | 8 November 1949 | People's Party | 1 | 1945 | ÖVP – SPÖ | Adolf Schärf (SPÖ) | |
8 November 1949 | 28 October 1952 | 2 | 1949 | ||||||
28 October 1952 | 2 April 1953 | 3 | — | ||||||
14 | Julius Raab (1891–1964) |
2 April 1953 | 29 June 1956 | People's Party | 1 | 1953 | ÖVP – SPÖ | 1,2: Adolf Schärf (SPÖ) until 22 May 1957 2,3,4: Bruno Pittermann (SPÖ) from 22 May 1957 | |
29 June 1956 | 16 July 1959 | 2 | 1956 | ||||||
16 July 1959 | 3 November 1960 | 3 | 1959 | ||||||
3 November 1960 | 11 April 1961 | 4 | — | ||||||
15 | Alfons Gorbach (1898–1972) |
11 April 1961 | 27 March 1963 | People's Party | 1 | — | ÖVP – SPÖ | Bruno Pittermann (SPÖ) | |
27 March 1963 | 2 April 1964 | 2 | 1962 | ||||||
16 | Josef Klaus (1910–2001) |
2 April 1964 | 19 April 1966 | People's Party | 1 | — | ÖVP – SPÖ | Bruno Pittermann (SPÖ) | |
19 April 1966 | 21 April 1970 | 2 | 1966 | ÖVP | Fritz Bock (ÖVP) until 19 Jan 1968 Hermann Withalm (ÖVP) from 19 Jan 1968 | ||||
17 | Bruno Kreisky (1911–1990) |
21 April 1970 | 4 November 1971 | Socialist Party | 1 | 1970 | SPÖ | 1,2,3: Rudolf Häuser (SPÖ) until 30 Sep 1976 3,4: Hannes Androsch (SPÖ) 30 Sep 1976 – 20 Jan 1981 4: Fred Sinowatz (SPÖ) from 20 Jan 1981 | |
4 November 1971 | 28 October 1975 | 2 | 1971 | ||||||
28 October 1975 | 5 June 1979 | 3 | 1975 | ||||||
5 June 1979 | 24 May 1983 | 4 | 1979 | ||||||
18 | Fred Sinowatz (1929–2008) |
24 May 1983 | 16 June 1986 | Socialist Party | 1 | 1983 | SPÖ – FPÖ | Norbert Steger (FPÖ) | |
19 | Franz Vranitzky (1937–) |
16 June 1986 | 21 January 1987 | Social Democratic Party | 1 | — | SPÖ – FPÖ | 1: Norbert Steger (FPÖ) | |
21 January 1987 | 17 December 1990 | 2 | 1986 | SPÖ – ÖVP | 2: Alois Mock (ÖVP) | ||||
17 December 1990 | 29 November 1994 | 3 | 1990 | 3: Josef Riegler (ÖVP) until 2 July 1991 3,4: Erhard Busek (ÖVP) 2 July 1991 – 4 May 1995 4,5: Wolfgang Schüssel (ÖVP) from 4 May 1995 | |||||
29 November 1994 | 12 March 1996 | 4 | 1994 | ||||||
12 March 1996 | 28 January 1997 | 5 | 1995 | ||||||
20 | Viktor Klima (1947–) |
28 January 1997 | 4 February 2000 | Social Democratic Party | 1 | — | SPÖ – ÖVP | Wolfgang Schüssel (ÖVP) | |
21 | Wolfgang Schüssel (1945–) |
4 February 2000 | 28 February 2003 | People's Party | 1 | 1999 | ÖVP – FPÖ | Susanne Riess-Passer (FPÖ) | |
28 February 2003 | 11 January 2007 | 2 | 2002 | ÖVP – FPÖ until 17 April 2005; ÖVP – BZÖ |
Hubert Gorbach (FPÖ/BZÖ) | ||||
22 | Alfred Gusenbauer (1960–) |
11 January 2007 | 2 December 2008 | Social Democratic Party | 1 | 2006 | SPÖ – ÖVP | Wilhelm Molterer (ÖVP) | |
23 | Werner Faymann (1960–) |
2 December 2008 | 16 December 2013 | Social Democratic Party | 1 | 2008 | SPÖ – ÖVP | 1: Josef Pröll (ÖVP) until 21 April 2011 1,2: Michael Spindelegger (ÖVP) 21 Apr 2011 – 1 Sep 2014 2: Reinhold Mitterlehner (ÖVP) from 1 Sep 2014 | |
16 December 2013 | 9 May 2016 | 2 | 2013 | ||||||
— | Reinhold Mitterlehner (1955–) Acting Chancellor |
9 May 2016 | 17 May 2016 | People's Party | — | SPÖ – ÖVP | — | ||
24 | Christian Kern (1966–) |
17 May 2016 | Incumbent | Social Democratic Party | 1 | — | SPÖ – ÖVP | Reinhold Mitterlehner (ÖVP) |
Statistics
The median age at which a Chancellor first takes office is roughly 53 years and 11 months, which falls between Josef Klaus and Fred Sinowatz. The youngest person to become Chancellor was Leopold Figl, who took office at the age of 43 years, 79 days. The oldest person to become Chancellor was Karl Renner at the age of 74 years, 134 days.
The oldest living Chancellor is Franz Vranitzky, born 4 October 1937 (aged 79 years, 64 days). The youngest living former Chancellor is Werner Faymann, born 4 May 1960 (aged 56 years, 217 days). The youngest living Chancellor is the incumbent, Christian Kern, born 4 January 1966 (aged 50 years, 338 days).
The longest lived Chancellor was Josef Klaus, who died 26 July 2001 at the age of 90 years, 345 days. Franz Vranitzky, the oldest living Chancellor, will tie Klaus if he lives to 14 September 2028. The shortest lived Chancellor was Leopold Figl, who died 9 May 1965 at the age of 62 years, 219 days.
# | Federal Chancellor | Date of birth | Age at ascension (first term) |
Time in office (total) |
Age at retirement (last term) |
Date of death | Longevity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Karl Renner | 14 December 1870 | 47 years, 308 days | 2 years, 135 days | 6 days | 75 years,31 December 1950 | 80 years, 17 days |
2 | Michael Mayr | 10 April 1864 | 88 days | 56 years,349 days | 72 days | 57 years,21 May 1922 | 58 years, 41 days |
3 | Johann Schober | 14 November 1874 | 46 years, 219 days | 347 days | 1 year,55 years, 320 days | 19 August 1932 | 57 years, 279 days |
4 | Walter Breisky | 8 July 1871 | 50 years, 202 days | 1 day | 50 years, 203 days | 25 September 1944 | 73 years, 79 days |
5 | Ignaz Seipel | 19 July 1876 | 45 years, 316 days | 6 days | 5 years,52 years, 289 days | 2 August 1932 | 56 years, 14 days |
6 | Rudolf Ramek | 12 April 1881 | 43 years, 222 days | 334 days | 1 year,45 years, 191 days | 24 July 1941 | 60 years, 103 days |
7 | Ernst Streeruwitz | 23 September 1874 | 54 years, 223 days | 145 days | 3 days | 55 years,19 October 1952 | 78 years, 26 days |
8 | Carl Vaugoin | 8 July 1873 | 57 years, 84 days | 65 days | 57 years, 149 days | 10 June 1949 | 75 years, 337 days |
9 | Otto Ender | 24 December 1875 | 54 years, 345 days | 199 days | 55 years, 179 days | 25 June 1960 | 84 years, 184 days |
10 | Karl Buresch | 12 October 1878 | 52 years, 252 days | 335 days | 53 years, 221 days | 16 September 1936 | 57 years, 340 days |
11 | Engelbert Dollfuß | 4 October 1892 | 39 years, 229 days | 65 days | 2 years,41 years, 294 days | 25 July 1934 | 41 years, 294 days |
12 | Kurt Schuschnigg | 14 December 1897 | 36 years, 227 days | 3 years, 225 days | 87 days | 40 years,18 November 1977 | 79 years, 339 days |
13 | Arthur Seyß-Inquart | 22 July 1892 | 45 years, 232 days | 2 days | 45 years, 234 days | 16 October 1946 | 54 years, 86 days |
14 | Leopold Figl | 2 October 1902 | 79 days | 43 years,7 years, 103 days | 50 years, 182 days | 9 May 1965 | 62 years, 219 days |
15 | Julius Raab | 29 November 1891 | 61 years, 124 days | 9 days | 8 years,69 years, 133 days | 8 January 1964 | 72 years, 40 days |
16 | Alfons Gorbach | 2 September 1898 | 62 years, 221 days | 2 years, 357 days | 65 years, 213 days | 31 July 1972 | 73 years, 333 days |
17 | Josef Klaus | 15 August 1910 | 53 years, 231 days | 19 days | 6 years,59 years, 249 days | 25 July 2001 | 90 years, 344 days |
18 | Bruno Kreisky | 22 January 1911 | 89 days | 59 years,33 days | 13 years,72 years, 122 days | 29 July 1990 | 79 years, 188 days |
19 | Fred Sinowatz | 5 February 1929 | 54 years, 108 days | 23 days | 3 year,57 years, 131 days | 11 August 2008 | 79 years, 188 days |
20 | Franz Vranitzky | 4 October 1937 | 48 years, 255 days | 10 years, 226 days | 59 years, 116 days | Living | 79 years, 64 days (Living) |
21 | Viktor Klima | 4 June 1947 | 49 years, 238 days | 7 days | 3 years,52 years, 247 days | Living | 69 years, 186 days (Living) |
22 | Wolfgang Schüssel | 7 June 1945 | 54 years, 242 days | 6 years, 341 days | 61 years, 218 days | Living | 71 years, 183 days (Living) |
23 | Alfred Gusenbauer | 8 February 1960 | 46 years, 337 days | 326 days | 1 year,48 years, 298 days | Living | 56 years, 303 days (Living) |
24 | Werner Faymann | 4 May 1960 | 48 years, 212 days | 7 years, 159 days | 5 days | 56 years,Living | 56 years, 217 days (Living) |
25 | Christian Kern | 4 January 1966 | 50 years, 134 days | 204 days (Ongoing) | Incumbent | Living | 50 years, 338 days (Living) |
See also
- History of Austria
- Politics of Austria
- President of Austria
- List of Federal Presidents of Austria
- List of Ministers-President of Austria
- List of Austrian Chancellors by Longevity
- Vice-Chancellor of Austria