In the first government headed by
Chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel, which was inaugurated in 2000, she became
Vice Chancellor and minister of
public services and
sports, representing her party in the coalition with Schüssel's
Austrian People's Party (ÖVP). The Freedom Party had finished second in the
1999 election, so its leader,
Jörg Haider, should have become Chancellor in any coalition with the ÖVP which finished third. However, Haider yielded to Schüssel in order to appease international opinion. Although this should have put him in line to become Vice-Chancellor, he realised he was too controversial to have any role in the government. He thus resigned as party leader in favour of Riess-Passer, who had been FPÖ managing chairwoman since 1996. In the course of the formation of the government in 2000, she became chairwoman and leader of the FPÖ. She was known for being loyal to Haider, which earned her the nickname
Königskobra (
King Cobra). After severe disagreements with her former political mentor Haider in Summer 2002 (the so-called
Knittelfeld Putsch), she resigned from all of her posts, as did finance minister
Karl-Heinz Grasser and the party spokesman in parliament,
Peter Westenthaler. After the
2002 elections, she remained Vice Chancellor on a provisional basis until the coalition between ÖVP and FPÖ was renewed in early 2003, and has since had no involvement in politics. Since 2004, Riess-Passer has been the
CEO of the
Wüstenrot-Gruppe. Riess-Hahn was also on the advisory board of the later bankrupt
Signa Holding. == Personal life ==