At their 2009 congress, Liberal Students’ Forum disintegrated from Liberal Forum and turned into an independent youth organization under the new name Young Liberals. Ahead of the European elections 2009 in Austria, they, rather than LIF, received support and the required signature by Austrian MEPKarin Resetarits, who stated that the program of the Young Liberals was better. While this allowed the liberal youth party mostly consisting of members under 25 to compete in the elections with an independent list, it also deepened the rift with former mother party LIF and caused significant uproar in Austrian media. After having garnered 0.7% or 20.668 votes with almost no support and no classic advertisements, the Young Liberals Austria announced that they would concentrate their efforts on student politicsfor the time being. Due to formal reasons, the JuLis were not able to compete in the elections to the Austrian Students' Association in 2009 and were subsequently not represented in the period 2009-2011. During their III. Federal Congress in October 2010, the JuLis presented the "liberal manifesto for tertiary education" and announced their candidature for the ÖH-elections 2011. Out of several dozen contestants, the JuLis were the only ones in favour of a system of deferred tuition fees, citing the inadequate studying conditions and extremely high dropout quotes in Austria’s public universities, which have a longstanding tradition of free and unrestricted education for everyone holding the matura. Nevertheless, the JuLis were able to secure three seats in the federal assembly of the ÖH and parts of the new program of the Austrian minister of science Karlheinz Töchterle resembled very closely to what the JuLis had proposed several months earlier. Despite the JuLis having a “complete party manifesto”, the Austrian media used to cite them as the potential youth wing of a yet-to-be-founded new liberal party in Austria. This happened in October 2012, when the JuLis participated in the foundation of NEOS – The New Austria as youth partners and Nikolaus Scherak was elected into the board of NEOS.
JUNOS (since 2013)
National board
The current national board was elected at the XXI. Federal Congress, which took place on November 2nd, 2019 in Vienna:
The JuLis see themselves as the only supporters of liberalism amongst Austria’s youth parties. According to their manifesto, their core values are freedom and :wikt:responsibility|responsibility, unity and diversity, rationality and progress, open-mindedness and tolerance, solidarity and a federal Europe.