Liechtenstein women only got the vote in 1984: Now the country could get its first female PM

Sabine Monauni could become the country's political leader following elections at the weekend

Borzou Daragahi
International Correspondent
@borzou
Monday 08 February 2021 14:20
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Liechtenstein
Liechtenstein

The tiny country of Liechtenstein appears on course to select its first female leader 37 years after its women first won the right to vote

Sabine Monauni, a 46-year-old diplomat who serves as Liechtenstein’s envoy to the European Union and Belgium, is on the cusp of becoming the latest in a wave of European nations led  by women. 

Within the last 12 months, voters in Finland, Estonia, Lithuania and Moldova have voted in female prime ministers. Estonia currently has a female president and PM.

The weekend elections in Liechtenstein saw record turnout in the nation of 39,000 despite the coronavirus pandemic. Two main parties were separated by less than 24 votes, and local news media outlets hailed one of the most “exciting” votes in the country’s recent history.  

“The voters wanted a change. But they didn't give a clear direction for it,” journalist Patrik Schädler wrote in the Liechtensteiner Vaterland newspaper. 

Ms. Monauni’s conservative Progressive Citizens’ Party and the rival centrist Patriotic Union wound up in a virtual tie in the elections, each receiving slightly less than 36 per cent of the votes and winning 10 seats in the 25-member parliament. 

Each party added to their performance in previous 2017 elections at the cost of smaller parties.

The rest of the seats were split between a leftist-green party and a far-right populist grouping, which appeared to lose ground. 

Land-locked, German-speaking Liechtenstein is in some ways a throwback to the kingdoms of fairytales. 

Nestled in the Alps between Switzerland and Austria across an area half the size of Dublin or Philadelphia, it is  famous for its medieval castles, often built along mountainsides with views of dramatic snow-capped peaks or verdant slopes. 

Liechtenstein is one of the richest countries in the world, the beneficiary of decades in money-laundering and tax-avoidance profits. Per capita income is around €150,000, and the country continues to prosper from its robust banking sector even after  it tightened rules in 2018 to get itself off blacklists as a money-hiding haven.  

Whether Ms Monauni, whose party currently heads the cabinet, or her 42-year-old rival Daniel Risch are elected premier, they would be subject to the considerable authority of the Hereditary Prince Aloïs von und zu Liechtenstein, 52 years old, whose family has been ruling the country since 1699. His father, Prince Hans-Adam, handed him the reins of power in 2003. 

Unlike other European constitutional monarchies, the country’s sovereign retains significant political powers which voters strengthened in a 2003 referendum. 

The reigning monarch can dissolve the government, veto bills and referendums. The ruling family owns almost all of the nation's land and is the richest monarchy in Europe, worth an estimated €3.6 billion 

Liechtenstein is also one of Europe’s most conseravative countries, where attempts to outlaw abortion were repeatedly squelched by the monarchy and voters.