VIENNA — Austria's general election campaign is heating up: Two high-profile contenders have gone way beyond rolling up their shirt sleeves — they've taken the shirts right off.
Borrowing a page from Russian President Vladimir Putin's playbook, the beefcake displays are the latest twist in the rivalry between populist candidate Frank Stronach and Heinz-Christian Strache, head of the anti-immigrant and EU-skeptic Freedom Party.
The two are both seeking the protest vote in Austria's Sept. 29 election.
On a continent where mainstream electioneering is normally a staid affair, Stronach was first to doff his shirt. Wearing jeans and a smile, he revealed a trim 80-year-old upper body as he stood next to his private lake during weekend interviews with Austrian dailies.
"I don't need to be ashamed of my body," the Austro-Canadian billionaire explained.
Strache responded immediately.
A photo of the tanned and athletic 42-year-old clad in swimming trunks appeared Sunday on his Facebook page, with the caption "top fit in the election campaign!"
The bare-chest battle went into round two on Monday, with Austria's major newspapers carrying both photos — along with articles debating whether such displays constituted below-the-belt campaigning. The photos reappeared Tuesday.