Adam was heavily active in
anti-abortion movements and served as chairman of PRO VITA, a movement for the "right to life". On 15 October 2005, he founded the
Christian Party of Austria, originally called the Christians. In the
2008 Austrian legislative election, he was the party's leading candidate, but failed to win a seat. In November 2008, he was replaced by as party leader. In early 2009, Adam left the party altogether and founded the Christen-Allianz the following year. In November 2013, he was fined 5400 euros for hate speech, when he made inflammatory comments about
Buddhism in a mailing program. He appealed to the , which reduced the fine to 2700 euros, half of which was suspended. On 26 January 2016, the ruling was overturned altogether by the
Supreme Court and referred the case back to the Regional Court. He later founded the OKZIDENT (Association for the Promotion of the Rule of Law), of which he served as deputy chairman. He was a member of the
Viennese Association of Academics. Alfons Adam died in
Sankt Pölten on 3 May 2021 at the age of 76 following a short, hard illness. ==References==