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The leaders of two anti-establishment parties have each claimed they have the right to govern Italy, after voters in Europe's fourth-largest economy did not return a majority to any single party.

The Eurosceptic, populist Five Star Movement was the biggest single party with a third of the vote.But the anti-immigrant League said it had been endorsed to run the country as part of a centre-right alliance. 

Forming a government could take weeks of negotiation and coalition-building. Former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has resigned as leader of the



governing centre-left Democratic Party, which performed poorly, taking less than 20 per cent of the vote. 

He said the party would not join a coalition with "anti-system forces" and would go into opposition instead.

An alliance between the far-right League and ex-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia party is set to win the most seats in the Lower House of Parliament, but the League has emerged as the senior partner. 
It won 17.4 per cent of the vote compared with Forza Italia's 14 percent.


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