''For other parties of the same name, see
Christian Social Party''
The 'Christian Social Party (CS)' was an
Austrian political party from
1893 to
1933 and is a predecessor of the contemporary
Austrian People's Party.
It was founded in 1893 by
Karl Lueger and developed from the
Christian Social Movement and the
Christian Social Club of Workers. It was oriented towards the
bourgeoisie and
clerical-catholic; there were many priests in the party, including Chancellor
Ignaz Seipel. This attracted many votes from the conservative rural population. Its support of
Austro-Hungarian Monarchy also gave it considerable popularity among
nobles.
From
1907 to
1911 it was the strongest party in the Lower House of the
Reichsrat, but it then lost this position to the
Social Democratic Workers' Party. During
World War I, it supported the government, but after the end of the
monarchy in
1918 it voted for the creation of a
republic and Austria's accession to
Germany.
From 1918 to
1920 it formed a coalition with the SDAPÖ. In 1920, as the strongest party, it entered into a coalition with the
Greater German People's Party and the
Landbund. All
Chancellors of Austria from
1920 were members of the Christian Social Party, and so was the
president from
1928 to
1938. From
1929 onwards, the party tried to ally with the
Heimwehr movement. However, this coalition turned not to be stable, which is why the party leadership decide to form a coalition with the Landbund and the Greater German Party again.
In the process of establishing the so-called
Austro-fascist dictorship, Christian Social Chancellor
Engelbert Dollfuß merged the Christian Social Party into the
Patriotic Front in
1933. After the ''
Anschluss'' of Austria to Nazi Germany, the party was banned in
March 1938 and ceased to exist. After the
Second World War, the party was not founded anew. Most of its supporters and politicians thought the name was too closely knit to Austrofascism, they founded the
ÖVP party, which can be regarded as the inheriting party of the CS.
Prominent members of the CS included:

Supporters of the Austrian Christian Social Party in 1934
★
Walter Breisky
★
Karl Buresch
★
Engelbert Dollfuß
★
Otto Ender
★
Viktor Kienböck
★
Karl Lueger
★
Michael Mayr
★
Hans Pernter
★
Rudolf Ramek
★
Richard Reisch
★
Richard Schmitz
★
Kurt von Schuschnigg
★
Ignaz Seipel
★
Fanny von Starhemberg
★
Ernst Streeruwitz
★
Josef Strobach
★
Carl Vaugoin
★
Richard Weiskirchner
External links
★
Karl von Vogelsang-Institut Institute for the research of the history of Austrian Christian Democracy (in German)