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Migrant influx boosts right-wing in key Austrian election

VIENNA (AP) - Just a few days after more than 100,000 people turned out in Vienna to support refugees, an anti-refugee party is poised to land a huge coup - a win at the polls that could see them take control of the Austrian capital.

More than any other topic, Austria's stance toward refugees is determining Sunday's race for Vienna's city hall, pitting voters who welcome those fleeing into Europe against others who fear that a surge of refugees threatens their own well-being.

Only a fraction of the nearly 200,000 people who crossed into this country last month stayed, with most traveling on to Germany. Still, the Interior Ministry counted over 46,000 requests for refugee status by the end of August, compared to around 28,000 for all of 2014.

Organizers of Saturday's demonstration say the turnout shows pro-immigrant sentiment in Vienna.

But the asylum numbers and the nightly newscasts showing masses of people entering Austria have increased support for the Freedom Party, which believes that immigration not only threatens traditional Austrian values but also cuts into an already shrinking job market.

In a video produced by its youth organization, a voiceover accompanying rapidly changing images of shrouded women asks: "Did you know that you will become a stranger in your own country? Did you know that you soon could become jobless?"

Freedom Party leader Heinz-Christian Strache has toned down his anti-immigrant rhetoric ahead of the Vienna vote in an attempt to win over critics. But other party members are not so subtle.

After an airline refused to fly an Afghan asylum-seeker out of the country because she put up a spirited fight, Freedom Party legislator Dagmar Belakowitsch-Jenewein suggested using military transport planes "where they can scream as loud as they want."

Polls say the Socialists, who dominate the city's two-party coalition, are still in front with more than a third of the vote, but the Freedom Party is gaining support and is close behind.

The Freedom Party already has made huge gains in several provincial elections this year, at the cost of the Socialists and the centrist People's Party, but it has not won outright. Those establishment parties have governed on all levels in Austria with few exceptions since the end of World War II.

Runoff mayoral elections also are being held Sunday in 44 communities in Upper Austria province. But "Red Vienna" is a special prize.

The city has been governed for 60 years by the Socialists, alone or as the dominant coalition partner. Beyond the cachet of controlling the capital as mayor, that post is a major stepping stone toward Strache's ultimate goal of becoming Austria's chancellor.

His party has always drawn support from right-of-center voters, Euroskeptics, anti-Semites and xenophobes. More recently, with joblessness growing, it has threatened to usurp the Socialists as the nation's blue-collar party.

This time, the Freedom Party is reaching out to all voters in hopes its anti-immigrant message will resonate with those fear the future.

"The majority of Austrians are faced with a real or imagined economic or social downturn," says political analyst Andreas Filtzmaier. "This is makes it easy for the Freedom Party to say, 'Things will only get worse because of mass immigration.'"

Migrants climb out of the windows of a train after they arrived at the railway station in Hegyeshalom, at the Austrian border, 169 kms west of Budapest, Hungary, Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2015. The migrants arrived here from the Croatian border to continue their journey to Austria. (Csaba Krizsan/MTI via AP) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015 photo, Afghan refugee Rasoul Nazari, 15, holds his 10-month-old nephew Imran after crossing the border between Hungary and Austria in Nickelsdorf, Austria. Tens of thousands of people trying to escape conflict and poverty in places like Syria and Afghanistan have been making their way across Europe this summer and fall, embarking on grueling journeys that typically start with a short boat trip from Turkey to Greece, then continue north and west on foot and by bus and train. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen) The Associated Press
A migrant climbs out of the window of a train after he and others arrived at the railway station of Hegyeshalom, at the Austrian border, 169 km west of Budapest, Hungary, Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2015. The migrants arrived here from the Croatian border to continue their journey to Austria. (Csaba Krizsan/MTI via AP) The Associated Press
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