Rebekka Salzer presents the ORF parliamentary magazine “Hohes Haus” on Sunday, February 9, 2025, at 12:00 p.m. in ORF 2 and on ORF on with the following topics:
Right of demonstration
The coalition negotiations between the FPÖ and ÖVP are pointed on button – it is currently only certain: government formation in Austria has never taken longer than this time. The negotiations are also accompanied by demonstrations – most recently on Tuesday in Vienna. The right to demonstrations has been part of fundamental rights in Austria since 1867. Every demonstration, also spontaneous or not registered, are covered by the right of assembly and must be protected by the police. In Vienna alone, 13,000 demonstrations are registered each year. But do such rallies also achieve the desired political effect? What or against what was demonstrated, Claus Bruckmann and Caroline Picker looked at themselves.
Political scientist Peter Filzmaier is in the studio.
Artificial intelligence
What is important for the future of the country? Party and election programs should give an answer to this. In fact, there are topics that will determine the lives of citizens: in the future, often only on the edge or not at all. For example, questions of the technology and since above all the rapidly fast development of artificial intelligence. This will change our entire life and that in the coming years.
However, you can hear astonishingly little about this topic from politics. “Hohes Haus” has started looking for the answer to the question of why politics before this topic also avoided such a large arc in the current election campaigns and what companies in the KI area urgently need. Robert Uitz informs.
Liechtenstein chooses
On Sunday, February 9th, Austria’s neighboring country Liechtenstein will choose a new state parliament. For the 25 seats, four parties are applying in the small state, in addition to two conservative -bourgeois old parties who have coalized or have been ruled alone since the Second World War, two smaller parties have also promoted votes. The new state parliament will then choose the five -member government. This could be exciting because a woman Liechtenstein could rule for the first time. Marion Flatz-Mäser reports.
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