A strict measure is useless if it is not enforceable. The same applies as with 2-G: When the duty comes, it has to be checked.
At half past two in the morning, when the federal and state governments finally agreed on the details, there was no more talk. On the night of November 19th at the Tyrolean Achensee, no footnotes should be clarified, only the big questions. One in particular: will all of Austria be locked down again? Yes, answered the top government and the governors. But: In order for the vaccinated to have more understanding for the restrictions, a drastic measure was promised for the others: a general compulsory vaccination. Apparently the ÖVP, the Greens and the SPÖ suspected that their unity could be doubted: The action paper that everyone present had signed was sent out as a photo evidence.
On the far left, not easy to decipher, Hans Peter Doskozil had also put his signature. She stood for Burgenland, but also for the SPÖ. There was no small print on the individual A4 page, which the ÖVP and the Greens later provided. In parliament you could comment on their draft law until Monday. One did it surprisingly sharply: Doskozil. The compulsory vaccination should not be implemented – at least not as the government had suggested. His central point of criticism: the planned regulation would overwhelm the authorities and administration, but would have little effect on the vaccination rate.
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