The System of "Hard Prose": Power, Money, and Absolute Loyalty
Behind the facade of factual political work, there is often a deep-seated system of mutual benefit and strategic safeguarding within the ÖVP. We highlight the key figures who are succeeding or managing the legacy of August Wöginger.
The Players and Their Earnings (Status 2025/26)
Here we document how much tax money the current group of "system maintainers" receives per month (Gross):
| Name | Function | Monthly Gross (approx.) | Focus / Controversies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Johanna Mikl-Leitner | Governor Lower Austria | 21,660 € | Advertisement millions, ORF-NÖ influence |
| Karoline Edtstadler | Governor Salzburg | 19,800 € | Moved from Federal Govt (2025), strategic coolness |
| Thomas Stelzer | Governor Upper Austria | 19,800 € | Raises his salary by 3.3% in 2026 |
| Gerhard Karner | Minister of Interior | 19,072 € | Dollfuß Museum past, deportations to Syria/Afghanistan |
| Wolfgang Sobotka | MP (a.D.) / ÖVP Academy | Pension + X | Mock Institute, Novomatic connection, "Golden Piano" |
Deeper Insight: Wolfgang Sobotka – Architect of Power
Wolfgang Sobotka is the symbolic figure for the system of "Hard Prose" in Austrian parliamentarism. Even after his withdrawal from the front row (October 2024), his influence remains palpable:
- The Alois Mock Institute & Novomatic: As president of this think tank, Sobotka was at the center of allegations of covert party funding by the gambling giant Novomatic. Advertisements and sponsorships flowed abundantly while Sobotka chaired the Ibiza inquiry committee – a classic constellation of "Hard Prose."
- The "Golden Piano": A gilded Bösendorfer grand piano ("Secession") rented for 3,000 € per month in the parliament became a symbol of the aloofness of the Sobotka era during the inflation crisis. It stands as a monument to the "aesthetic of small things" – at the expense of the taxpayers.
- The Move to the Backroom (2025/26): Since his departure from the National Council, Sobotka has served as president of the Political Academy of the ÖVP. Here, he secures the ideological and strategic continuity of the system, financed by party funding and a handsome politician's pension.
Strategic Parallels to Wöginger & Hattmannsdorfer
All these figures share a common pattern:
- The Long March: Rise through party leagues and state organizations.
- The Post-Architecture: Filling key positions in ministries and state-related companies (Example: Thomas Schmid).
- Absolute Loyalty: A resignation only occurs in an absolute emergency; before that, any criticism is dismissed as "criminalization of politics."
Forensic Conclusion
While the average salary in Austria stagnates, the leadership of the OÖVP (Stelzer) allows itself salary increases to prevent "self-depreciation." At the same time, the pressure on whistleblowers like Christa Scharf is increased.
The "Horten Mystery" shows: the money is never gone; it just belongs to someone else. Usually, someone with the right party book.