How did we get here?
After elections in 2017, the far-right
명품패딩레플리카=명품패딩레플리카
Freedom Party (FPO) joined a coalition with Mr Kurz's People's Party (OVP).
But the government fell apart in May after a video sting scandal, dubbed "Ibiza-gate".
Journalists revealed secret recordings of the Freedom Party's leader, Heinz-Christian Strache, promising government contracts to a woman
여자레플리카사이트=여자레플리카사이트
posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch at a villa on the Spanish island.
Snap elections followed in September. The People's Party came out unscathed, winning in eight of Austria's nine federal states and
홍콩명품쇼핑몰=홍콩명품쇼핑몰
increasing its share of the national vote to 37%. The Freedom Party, in contrast, only won 16%, a sharp fall from its 2017 performance.
Mr Kurz's party however did
레플리카시계사이트=레플리카시계사이트
not gain a majority and began coalition talks with smaller parties - including the Greens, who had won 14% of the vote.
Green leader Mr Kogler said straight after the September election that the next government would need to see "radical change" from the right-wing policies pursued by the previous coalition.
A Green party congress must still endorse the coalition with the People's Party. Its roughly 280 delegates are however expected to approve
홍콩명품가방=홍콩명품가방
the agreement.
Of Austria's 15 ministries, the Greens are expected to take control of four.