Lienz
Lienz is a municipality and the administrative center of the Lienz District in East Tyrol, Austria, encompassing the entire East Tyrol region within the federal state of Tyrol. Located in the Eastern Alps at the confluence of the Drava and Isel rivers in the Lienz Basin, the town sits at an elevation of approximately 730 meters amid the Hohe Tauern and Dolomites mountain ranges.[1][2]
As of 2024, Lienz has a population of 11,945 residents across its 15.9 km² area, making it the largest settlement in East Tyrol with a density supporting its role as a regional hub.[3][4] The town features medieval architecture, including the 13th-century Schloss Bruck, which houses regional history and art museums, and nearby Roman settlement remains at Aguntum, underscoring its long-standing strategic importance on trade routes linking northern Europe to Italy.[5][6]
Lienz's defining characteristics include its sunnier microclimate with over 2,000 annual sunshine hours, fostering tourism focused on hiking, skiing, and cultural events, while its history reflects influences from the Counts of Gorizia and periods of Venetian and Habsburg control, contributing to a preserved old town core.[7][6] In the 20th century, the town gained notoriety for the 1945 British handover of Cossack and other anti-Soviet forces encamped there to Yugoslav and Soviet authorities, resulting in mass deportations and executions that highlighted postwar repatriation controversies.[8]
Geography
Location and Topography
Lienz lies in East Tyrol, Austria, at the confluence of the Drava and Isel rivers, forming a central point in the upper Drava Valley.[9] The town occupies a position in the Lienz Basin, a relatively broad alluvial plain at an elevation of 673 meters above sea level.[10] This lowland area, hemmed in by steep alpine slopes, contrasts sharply with the surrounding high-elevation terrain, creating a natural corridor amid rugged peaks.[11] To the north, the Hohe Tauern range rises prominently, with peaks exceeding 3,000 meters, while the Gailtal Alps, encompassing the Lienz Dolomites to the south, provide formidable barriers with summits like the Große Sandspitze reaching 2,770 meters.[12] The basin's topography features gently sloping valley floors flanked by precipitous mountain walls, which channel river flows and limit lateral expansion, fostering a compact settlement zone.[9] The Lienz Dolomites, composed primarily of limestone formations, contribute to the region's distinct relief through jagged ridges and plateaus that influence resource distribution, including forested slopes yielding timber and underlying strata rich in minerals such as limestone aggregates.[12] This karstic terrain, with its elevations transitioning from basin lows to high plateaus, underscores the area's alpine character, where valley confines enhance accessibility along fluvial axes while mountain enclosures provide protective escarpments.[13]Climate
Lienz experiences a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb), marked by distinct seasonal contrasts typical of the Eastern Alps, with warm summers and cold, snowy winters influenced by its valley location at 676 meters elevation surrounded by high peaks that moderate extremes but amplify orographic precipitation.[14][15] The annual mean temperature stands at 3.4 °C, with July averages reaching highs of about 24 °C and lows around 11 °C, while January sees highs near -1 °C and lows dropping to -10 °C or below.[15] Precipitation totals approximately 1,337 mm yearly, concentrated in summer thunderstorms that provide essential moisture for agriculture, such as hay production in alpine pastures, though excessive summer rain can occasionally lead to localized flooding.[16] Winters accumulate significant snowfall, with February often recording the deepest cover—up to 15 cm in weekly averages at nearby resorts—enabling reliable conditions for winter tourism like skiing while posing challenges to road access and avalanche risks in surrounding mountains.[17][18] Extreme temperatures have reached a record high of 39 °C on August 3, 2013, during heatwaves, and lows as severe as -24.5 °C in February, reflecting the continental air mass influences that drive rapid shifts.[19] Long-term observations from the Lienz meteorological station, operational since the early 20th century under GeoSphere Austria (formerly ZAMG), indicate a mild warming of about 1-2 °C in annual averages since 1900, attributable to regional atmospheric circulation changes and aligned with broader Eastern Alpine trends without deviating from natural variability observed in historical records.[20][21]History
Ancient and Medieval Foundations
![Schloss Bruck, 13th-century castle in Lienz][float-right] Archaeological evidence indicates human presence in the Lienz basin during the Bronze Age, with more substantial settlement by Celtic tribes of the Laianci in the late Iron Age, likely around the 4th to 1st centuries BCE. These groups adapted to the alpine environment through mining activities, exploiting local deposits of metals such as iron and copper, which facilitated early trade networks across the Eastern Alps. The Laianci, part of the broader Noric confederation, established hilltop settlements and oppida that demonstrated continuity in resource extraction despite topographic challenges.[22][23] The Roman conquest of Noricum in 15 BCE integrated the region into the empire, with the nearby municipium of Aguntum, established under Claudius around 50 CE, serving as a key mining and trading hub approximately 5 km east of Lienz. Aguntum's exploitation of regional ores and its role in transalpine commerce influenced local economies, evidenced by imported goods and infrastructure like roads that connected the Lienz area to broader imperial networks. This period marked a shift toward more organized extraction and exchange, with archaeological finds of Roman pottery and tools underscoring economic interdependence in the Drava Valley.[24][25] Following the decline of Roman authority in the 5th century, the area saw sparse documentation until the early Middle Ages, when Lienz emerged as a settlement under ecclesiastical and feudal oversight. By the 12th century, it developed into a market town, benefiting from its strategic position at the confluence of the Isel and Drava rivers, which supported trade amid alpine passes. The first reliable records of the settlement date to around 1030 CE, referenced in deeds related to regional bishops.[26] Fortification efforts intensified in the 13th century amid feudal rivalries, with the construction of Schloss Bruck between 1252 and 1277 by the Counts of Gorizia as a residence and defensive stronghold overlooking the town. This castle, featuring machicolations and a donjon, symbolized the consolidation of local power and protection against conflicts in the fragmented Holy Roman Empire territories. Such structures highlighted medieval adaptations to persistent threats in the isolated valley, fostering urban growth around fortified cores.[27][28]Habsburg Era and Early Modern Period
Upon the extinction of the male line of the Counts of Görz in 1500, their territories, including Lienz, were bequeathed to Habsburg Emperor Maximilian I, who promptly incorporated the area into the County of Tyrol. This shift marked the end of Lienz's status as a semi-autonomous princely residence under the Görz dynasty and its subordination to Habsburg administrative centralization, which prioritized imperial cohesion over local privileges. As a district capital in East Tyrol, Lienz assumed a secondary administrative role within the broader Tyrolean framework, facilitating Habsburg oversight of Alpine borderlands while diminishing the independent judicial and fiscal autonomy previously enjoyed by Görz rulers. Monarchical centralization streamlined governance but eroded rural self-determination, channeling resources toward Vienna's strategic priorities rather than local needs.[29][30] Integration into Tyrol enhanced Lienz's economic position along key trans-Alpine trade corridors, such as the route from Venzone in Friuli through the Pustertal valley toward Salzburg, complementing Habsburg control over major passes like the Brenner. This connectivity boosted commerce in salt, metals, and textiles, with Lienz serving as a customs and market hub linking Italian and German spheres under unified Habsburg tariffs. However, the emphasis on imperial trade monopolies often favored northern Tyrolean routes, limiting Lienz's gains and heightening dependencies on central directives that prioritized overall dynastic revenue over peripheral development.[9][31] The Habsburg suppression of the Reformation and vigorous Counter-Reformation policies solidified Catholic dominance in Tyrol, including Lienz, where Protestant inroads were minimal and swiftly curtailed through expulsions and Jesuit missions. Archduke Ferdinand II's enforcement from 1619 onward, backed by imperial edicts, expelled Protestant clergy and nobility, ensuring religious uniformity that reinforced monarchical loyalty but stifled confessional diversity. In the 17th and 18th centuries, this orthodoxy manifested in sporadic witch trials across Tyrol, driven by fears of diabolical threats amid economic hardships, as Habsburg authorities used inquisitorial processes to maintain social order and ecclesiastical control. Peasant uprisings, such as those protesting tax hikes and serfdom impositions during the Thirty Years' War era and later Baroque absolutism, underscored frictions between imperial centralization and Tyrol's tradition of communal self-reliance, with revolts quelled by Habsburg troops to preserve fiscal extraction for dynastic wars.[32][33][31]19th Century to World War I
In the mid-19th century, Lienz benefited from the expansion of rail infrastructure within the Austrian Empire, with the Drava Valley Railway's Villach–Lienz section opening on November 20, 1871, as part of the Südbahn network built by the imperial-royal Südbahn-Gesellschaft.[34] This connection enhanced access to markets in Carinthia and South Tyrol, boosting trade in agricultural products and timber, and positioning Lienz as a key distribution point for East Tyrol's peripheral economy. Population growth followed, with the town serving as an administrative and commercial nexus amid the empire's efforts to integrate remote alpine regions. The local economy remained predominantly agricultural, focused on livestock and forestry suited to the rugged terrain, though small-scale craft workshops emerged in Lienz for textiles and metalwork by the late 19th century. Industrialization had minimal impact compared to urban centers like Innsbruck, limited by geographic isolation and reliance on subsistence farming; however, the Austro-Hungarian Empire's multi-ethnic strains—evident in nationalist movements among Slavs and others—heightened awareness of Tyrolean distinctiveness, fostering a regional identity rooted in German-speaking cultural cohesion rather than broader imperial loyalty. World War I intensified these dynamics after Italy's 1915 declaration of war, opening the Tyrolean Front where East Tyrolean recruits, including from Lienz, bolstered Austro-Hungarian defenses in high-alpine positions against Italian advances.[35] Local patriotism manifested in voluntary enlistments and homefront support for the k.u.k. army, drawing on historical precedents like the 1809 rebellions, though conscription drew heavily from rural populations already strained by prewar emigration. Combat losses were significant, with subsequent memorials honoring thousands from East Tyrol; civilians endured acute hardships, including rationing, labor shortages from male mobilization, and inflation that eroded agricultural livelihoods by 1918.[36]Interwar Period and World War II
Following the dissolution of Austria-Hungary and the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye in September 1919, which transferred South Tyrol to Italy, Lienz and East Tyrol were severed from North Tyrol, disrupting traditional trade routes and contributing to regional economic isolation and stagnation throughout the interwar period. Austria as a whole grappled with postwar hyperinflation, currency devaluation, and the impacts of the Great Depression, experiencing a real GNP decline of 22.45% from 1930 to 1933, with recovery limited to about half the losses by 1937.[37][38] In East Tyrol, these national trends were intensified by the loss of connectivity, reliance on agriculture and small-scale industry, and minimal infrastructure investment, fostering unemployment and emigration without significant industrial diversification. The Anschluss of March 12, 1938, incorporated Austria into the Third Reich with minimal resistance, as Nazi supporters in East Tyrol—though numbering only around 150 party members in Lienz by 1933—quickly consolidated power through arrests of opponents and Gleichschaltung of local institutions. Unlike North Tyrol, the Lienz district was administratively attached to Reichsgau Carinthia in October 1938, rather than Reichsgau Tirol-Vorarlberg, aligning it with Gauleiter Friedrich Rainer's administration centered in Klagenfurt.[39] This period saw the onset of Nazi persecution, including the suppression of Catholic and social democratic elements, with over 100 East Tyroleans executed, imprisoned, or otherwise victimized by the regime for dissent or alleged disloyalty.[40] During World War II, Lienz functioned primarily as a logistical rear area supporting German operations along the nearby Alpine front, with its mountainous terrain and ethnic German homogeneity limiting organized partisan activity compared to more diverse or accessible regions like Carinthia or Styria. Austrian resistance networks, such as O5, operated sporadically in Tyrol but faced severe reprisals, including Gestapo interrogations and executions, with local collaboration often prevailing due to ideological alignment or coercion. Allied air raids bypassed Lienz, resulting in negligible bombing damage to the town itself, unlike heavier strikes on industrial hubs such as Innsbruck. British troops liberated Lienz on May 8, 1945, amid the collapsing Wehrmacht defenses, revealing networks of forced laborers deployed in regional construction, agriculture, and armaments support under Nazi oversight, though no major concentration subcamps were documented directly within the municipal boundaries.[41]Postwar Repatriations and the Lienz Cossack Tragedy
In the weeks following the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany on 8 May 1945, approximately 32,000 members of the XV Cossack Cavalry Corps—anti-communist fighters who had collaborated with German forces against the Red Army, along with their families and associated Russian émigrés—surrendered to British V Corps units in eastern Austria and were concentrated in displaced persons camps near Lienz, including the main facility at Peggetz.[42][43] These individuals, many of whom were Soviet citizens by birth but opposed Bolshevik rule, explicitly pleaded against repatriation, citing well-founded fears of execution, imprisonment in gulags, or forced labor upon return to Stalin's regime; British officers initially assured them of protection under the principle of non-forcible return for those resisting repatriation.[44][45] Lieutenant General Charles Keightley, commanding V Corps from his headquarters in Graz, received direct orders on 24 May 1945 from higher British command—ultimately tracing to Prime Minister Winston Churchill and influenced by Yalta Conference commitments to repatriate all Soviet nationals—to disregard such resistances and effect handover without exception, prioritizing Allied-Soviet diplomatic relations over individual pleas.[42][46] On 28 May, Keightley's forces deceived Cossack atamans (leaders) into attending a purported negotiation under a white flag of truce at the Spital an der Drau camp, arresting them on arrival and immediately transferring dozens, including General Helmuth von Pannwitz, to Soviet custody; this act shattered trust and sparked widespread panic, hunger strikes, and suicides among the camp population.[47][46] The mass forcible repatriation commenced on 1 June 1945, with British troops using tanks, armored vehicles, and batons to herd the Cossacks onto trains and trucks despite fierce resistance; eyewitness accounts describe chaotic scenes of trampling, shootings to quell escapes, and self-inflicted deaths, resulting in over 700 fatalities at the camps alone from crushing, British gunfire, or suicide, with bodies interred in 28 mass graves in the Lienz cemetery and additional unmarked sites.[42][47] Once delivered to Soviet forces at the Semmering Pass, the Cossacks endured further ordeals including summary executions during marches, starvation, and transport to remote gulags in Siberia and Central Asia, where mortality rates en route and in early captivity reached 10-20% based on survivor testimonies and Soviet archival estimates, with total deaths numbering in the thousands directly attributable to the operation.[42][44] Declassified British documents and eyewitness reports, as detailed in Nikolai Tolstoy's 1986 analysis drawing from military dispatches and refugee interviews, substantiate the event as a calculated realpolitik maneuver to placate Stalin amid fragile postwar alliances, overriding Field Marshal Harold Alexander's reservations and exposing systemic Allied prioritization of geopolitical expediency over humanitarian norms; Austrian civilians in Lienz witnessed peripheral aspects but played no active role, with local authorities uninvolved beyond basic logistics support.[45][46] Subsequent narratives in some official histories have minimized the scale or intent by emphasizing legalistic interpretations of Yalta, but primary evidence from participants confirms the deliberate deception and disproportionate human cost, rendering the Lienz handover a stark exemplar of policy-induced tragedy.[42][44]Demographics
Population Dynamics
As of 1 January 2025, Lienz recorded a population of 12,107 residents. This figure marks a slight uptick from 11,935 in 2021, reflecting short-term stability amid broader regional stagnation.[48][49] Post-World War II reconstruction saw minimal net population influx into Lienz, with numbers stabilizing around 10,000 by the 1950s after wartime displacements and repatriations. From the 1990s onward, the city's population has hovered between 11,800 and 12,100, showing no sustained growth despite national urbanization pressures; annual net changes remain near zero, driven by balanced but low-scale births, deaths, and internal migrations.[50][51] Demographic pressures include persistently low birth rates, aligning with Austria's national total fertility rate of 1.31 children per woman in 2024, which sustains an aging profile in alpine municipalities like Lienz. Outmigration to regional hubs such as Innsbruck contributes to this equilibrium, with the surrounding Lienz district experiencing net annual losses of approximately 100-200 residents, though the urban core offsets some decline through localized retention.[52][53][54]Ethnic and Linguistic Composition
Lienz maintains a high degree of ethnic homogeneity, with residents predominantly of Austrian German descent. As of recent demographic data derived from official statistics, approximately 88.7% of the municipal population holds Austrian citizenship, while foreigners constitute 11.3%, a figure notably lower than Austria's national average exceeding 20%.[55] [56] This composition reflects minimal net immigration since the 1990s, attributable to the town's alpine isolation and reliance on localized industries like agriculture and small-scale manufacturing, which limit inflows from non-EU sources compared to urban centers such as Vienna or Innsbruck.[57] At the district level encompassing Lienz, Austrian citizenship rises to 93.1%, underscoring even greater uniformity in surrounding rural areas where seasonal labor from neighboring Italy or Slovenia occasionally supplements the workforce but does not alter the core ethnic profile.[58] Historical ethnic minorities, including residual Italian or Slovene elements from pre-1918 border dynamics, remain negligible at under 1%, with no significant Slavic settlement having occurred in East Tyrol unlike adjacent Carinthia.[59] Linguistically, German dominates as the mother tongue for over 98% of residents, aligning with broader Tyrolean patterns where Austro-Bavarian variants prevail.[60] The East Tyrolean dialect, a subdialect marked by archaic features and intonation distinct from Standard High German, persists robustly in everyday discourse, informal settings, and local media, serving as a marker of cultural continuity amid national linguistic standardization efforts.[61] This dialectal tenacity, reinforced by endogamous social networks and geographic barriers, functions as a de facto safeguard against external linguistic assimilation, with multilingual policies—such as optional Italian instruction near borders—exerting limited uptake beyond formal requirements.[62]Economy
Primary Sectors and Industry
Lienz District's economy features a modest primary sector dominated by agriculture and forestry, shaped by the alpine terrain of East Tyrol, where livestock farming and timber production support local sustainability but contribute limited GDP relative to manufacturing.[63] Forestry, in particular, provides raw materials for wood processing and protective functions against natural hazards, with historical practices transitioning to sustainable management amid declining arable land use.[64] Agriculture focuses on dairy and mountain grazing, reflecting East Tyrol's traditional cereal-livestock systems, though overall primary sector employment remains under 10% of the workforce due to structural shifts toward industry.[65] The industrial sector forms the backbone of employment in Lienz District, with manufacturing firms employing 4,141 workers as of 2023, the highest among Tyrol's districts, underscoring a transition from resource extraction legacies like timber and minor historical mining to precision engineering and specialized production.[66] Key enterprises include Liebherr-Hausgeräte Lienz GmbH, which develops and manufactures energy-efficient refrigeration and freezing appliances, ranking among Tyrol's top revenue generators with 1,328 employees and contributing to the district's role as an administrative and production hub.[67] Similarly, Durst Austria GmbH, established in Lienz in 1999, specializes in digital printing technologies and software development, leveraging regional engineering expertise for innovation in phototechnics and production systems over its 25-year presence.[68] Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in metalworking, machinery, and apparatus construction further bolster resilience, with 37 industrial firms driving apprenticeships and local value chains.[69] This industrial focus sustains low unemployment, aligning with Tyrol's regional rate below 5% in early 2025, reflecting efficient labor markets and SME adaptability despite alpine constraints on scale.[70] Hydropower from local rivers supplements energy needs, supporting manufacturing without heavy reliance on imports, while the district's balanced branch mix—industry alongside crafts—fosters economic stability as Lienz coordinates administrative functions for surrounding SMEs.[63]Tourism and Recent Developments
Tourism constitutes a vital economic pillar in Lienz, with the local economy recording approximately 500,000 overnight stays annually, primarily fueled by winter skiing in the Lienzer Bergbahnen area on Zettersfeld and summer hiking in the Lienz Dolomites, including trails around Mt. Hochstein.[71][72] Complementary summer attractions draw visitors to cultural sites, such as the Egger-Lienz Gallery at Schloss Bruck, which houses one of the largest collections of the East Tyrolean painter Albin Egger-Lienz's works, emphasizing regional peasant life and expressionist themes.[73] This seasonal pattern underscores tourism's role in offsetting East Tyrol's chronic depopulation trends, where rural outflows have strained local demographics, by generating employment in hospitality and guiding services that retain younger residents.[74][75] However, this reliance invites critique: tourism's seasonality exacerbates resource strains, including water usage peaks and habitat pressures in alpine zones, without fully diversifying the economy beyond low-skill, transient jobs. Recent expansions aim to bolster capacity and sustainability; the harry's home Lienz hotel, with 85 rooms featuring modern amenities, officially opened on June 21, 2024, targeting extended stays amid rising demand.[76] Concurrently, infrastructure enhancements like the Lienz South Connection upgrade—a €220 million renewal of the 220-kV line to Italy, set for completion by 2031—increase transmission capacity by 500 MW, enabling higher energy loads from expanded visitor facilities and mitigating blackout risks during peak seasons.[77][78] In 2025, the MCI Campus Lienz launched a bachelor's program in technical studies, commencing in September with an initial cohort of 20 students, focusing on practical engineering skills to supply skilled labor for tourism-related innovations, such as digital booking systems and eco-friendly infrastructure.[79] These developments causally link to broader growth: enhanced accommodations and power reliability support visitor influxes, potentially stabilizing population by attracting tech-oriented youth, though sustained impact hinges on integrating tourism with non-seasonal sectors to avert overdependence vulnerabilities evident in fluctuating annual stays.[80]Government and Politics
Local Governance Structure
Lienz operates under Austria's federal municipal framework, which grants localities considerable autonomy in areas such as urban planning, public utilities, and community services, with oversight from the Tyrolean state government. The governance model follows a classic mayor-council system: the mayor (Bürgermeister), directly elected by citizens, heads the executive branch and manages operational administration, while the municipal council (Gemeinderat) functions as the elected legislative assembly responsible for approving budgets, enacting bylaws, and supervising executive actions. This structure emphasizes local decision-making, allowing Lienz to tailor policies to regional needs like alpine infrastructure resilience without extensive federal micromanagement.[81][82] As of January 2025, the mayor is Dipl.-Ing. Elisabeth Blanik, affiliated with the SPÖ, who was reelected in the 2022 local elections and continues to lead the city's executive.[83] The council comprises representatives from multiple parties, reflecting proportional election outcomes, and convenes to address priorities including fiscal allocation and service delivery. Lienz's administration also encompasses an executive board (Gemeindevorstand) comprising the mayor, deputies, and councilors, which handles preparatory and implementational duties.[81] Serving as the administrative hub of Bezirk Lienz—the sole district in East Tyrol—Lienz coordinates essential district-level functions, including the district commissioner's office (Bezirksverwaltungsbehörde), regional court, forestry authority, and employment services, extending oversight to roughly 49,011 inhabitants across 33 municipalities as of January 1, 2025.[84][85] This role amplifies the town's influence in regional coordination, particularly for cross-municipal issues like emergency response and resource distribution, while adhering to Austria's principle of subsidiarity that devolves powers to the lowest effective level.[86] Budgetary decisions underscore a pragmatic emphasis on infrastructure durability over expansive welfare initiatives, with recent allocations supporting flood defenses along the Isel River to counter alpine flood risks—a critical measure given the region's vulnerability to extreme weather events.[87] Such investments, often funded through municipal revenues and state grants, prioritize long-term hazard mitigation and connectivity enhancements, aligning with East Tyrol's geographic imperatives rather than broad social program expansions.[81]Electoral Trends and Political Culture
In the 2024 Austrian National Council election, the Lienz district exhibited pronounced conservative leanings, with the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) securing 39.58% of valid votes and the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) obtaining 30.03%, combining for approximately 70% support among major parties.[88] This marked a sharp FPÖ surge, more than doubling its 2019 share from 14.79%, while the ÖVP declined from 55.14%, reflecting voter shifts amid national dissatisfaction with immigration policies and economic pressures.[88] Voter turnout rose to 75.14%, indicating heightened engagement in this rural border region.[88] Support for left-leaning parties remained subdued, with the Social Democratic Party (SPÖ) at 10.59% (up slightly from 8.97%) and the Greens at 5.87% (down from 11.14%), totaling under 17%.[88] These patterns align with East Tyrol's agrarian economy and geographic isolation, fostering self-reliant attitudes skeptical of urban-centric progressivism and federal overreach, as evidenced by consistent ÖVP dominance in prior Tyrolean state elections where rural districts like Lienz prioritized local autonomy over expansive welfare or environmental mandates. Border proximity to Italy amplifies concerns over migration and security, bolstering FPÖ appeals for stricter controls, distinct from cosmopolitan NEOS gains to 8.31%.[88] Historical residues, including the 1945 Lienz Cossack repatriations evoking anti-communist vigilance, subtly underpin local discourse against ideological centralization, reinforcing resistance to EU-driven homogenization that could erode regional sovereignty.[89] This electoral conservatism contrasts with Austria's urban progressivism, rooted in causal factors like dependence on tourism and farming, where policy preferences emphasize practical border enforcement over supranational integration.[90]| Party | 2024 % (Lienz District) | 2019 % | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| ÖVP | 39.58 | 55.14 | -15.56 |
| FPÖ | 30.03 | 14.79 | +15.24 |
| SPÖ | 10.59 | 8.97 | +1.62 |
| Grüne | 5.87 | 11.14 | -5.27 |
| NEOS | 8.31 | 7.75 | +0.56 |