It is hard to imagine, say, the Freedom Party becoming a ready forum for such ideas.
Geert Wilders is a member of the Dutch Parliament and head of the Freedom Party.
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They would rely on the Freedom Party's 24 seats to pass legislation by a tiny margin.
Most people at the top of the Freedom Party still want Mr Haupt to stay in charge.
The social-affairs minister, Herbert Haupt, who formally leads the Freedom Party, is one of the authors of the reform.
According to the poll, the Freedom Party will see its share of the seats fall from 24 to 19.
The election was called after the Freedom Party withdrew its support for Mr Rutte's budget cuts six months ago.
As a result, Mr Haider and his allies in the Freedom Party's group in parliament had the reform watered down.
June's general election delivered a surge of support for the Freedom Party, which won the third biggest share of the seats.
But Austria has not become notably harsher in its treatment of immigrants than it was before the Freedom Party joined the government.
The Freedom Party's vote in a Vienna city election dropped to 20%.
The new rainbow coalition has shown it can survive without the Freedom Party, leaving Geert Wilders in something of a political no-man's land.
As for immigration policy, the inclusion of the Freedom Party in government for the past three years has made only a slight difference.
Since 5 March, the two coalition parties along with the Freedom Party have been trying to reach agreement on budget cuts before the deadline.
Geert Wilders, Member of Parliament of the Netherlands and chairman of the Freedom Party, goes on trial Wednesday in the land of the Dutch.
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The Freedom Party would gain three more seats if an election were held now, a survey by Dutch polling firm Synovate three weeks ago suggested.
The Freedom Party's parliamentary chief, Peter Westenthaler, then said Mr Zeman was "mentally disturbed" and "more at home in the jungle than in the European Union".
Fiercely anti-immigrant, the Freedom Party (PVV), claims to trace its ideological roots back to the ideas of the Enlightenment and to defend them against culturally different newcomers.
The National Front in France (see article) and the Freedom Party in the Netherlands have been especially adept in exploiting the latent feelings of resentment against immigrants.
But the Freedom Party's recent entry into government, which Mr Haider presents as a healthy break with the post-war duopoly, has led to Austria's boycott by its fellow EU governments.
Yet the Freedom Party, supported as much for its anti-establishment flavour as for Mr Haider's xenophobia, continued to stay above 20% in the opinion polls during and after the country's ostracisation.
The Freedom Party's economic policies are populist and left-leaning.
Mr. Fritsen says he doesn't support the anti-Islamic views of the Freedom Party, but he does support its call to return to the guilder, the Dutch national currency that the euro replaced.
Mr Haider had long been facing growing unrest from the Freedom Party's nationalist wing, as supporters blamed him for a string of electoral defeats and urged a return to his old populism.
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But it was precisely the new-found respectability of the Freedom Party's people in government that began to niggle Mr Haider, especially as his party's popularity, based largely on protest in opposition, started to slide.
ECONOMIST: Austria's collapsing government: Back to square one | The
So the Freedomites hope that many conservatives, fed up with the grand coalition but no fans of Mr Haider, will vote for the Freedom Party without fearing that its boss will pop up in government, let alone as its head.
But the European Union's reaction to the prospect of the Freedom Party joining a ruling coalition has been hypocritical and wholly disproportionate to Austria's supposed offence in seeking to build a stable government backed by a majority of the voters.
Not only did the public widely view Geert Wilders's last-minute walkout from the budget negotiations as an irresponsible act, but latest polls suggest the Freedom Party would win only 17 seats in parliament - far fewer than its 2010 election high of 24.
Fisheries Minister Mahinda Rajapakse, a leader of the Freedom Party, wrote an open letter to the president in which he noted that the government could hardly be proud of scoring about a one-percentage-point advantage over the main opposition party after four-and-a-half years in office.
Mr Zuma was prominent in promoting the ANC among Zulus who had voted for the Inkatha Freedom Party in the first free elections in 1994, and was consistently elected to senior ANC posts.
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