The Cairns Post

Italians get anger off chest

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A surge for populist and far-right parties in Italy’s elections could result in a hung parliament with a major right-wing alliance likely to win the most votes.

A SURGE for populist and far-right parties in Italy’s elections could result in a hung parliament with a major right-wing alliance likely to win the most votes, according to projection­s yesterday after a campaign dominated by anger against immigratio­n.

A bare-breasted protester confronted Silvio Berlusconi as the scandal-hit tycoon staged a return to frontline politics.

Leaping on to a table, the demonstrat­or shouted “Time’s up” as the flamboyant 81-year-old prepared to vote in the Italian elections.

The three-times former PM, famed for his disreputab­le “bunga-bunga” parties, averted his eyes and was bundled out of the room by security guards.

The woman was taken down from the table and ushered out.

Scrawled across her chest was the phrase “Berlusconi, you have expired”.

On her back was the word “Femen”, the name of a radical Ukrainian feminist group.

The incident took place as the self-styled godfather of Italian politics posed for photograph­ers at a voting station in Milan.

Mr Berlusconi’s 32-yearold fiancee Francesca Pascale joked: “She passed so quickly I didn’t get a chance to see her.”

Italians went to the polls after a divisive election campaign dominated by concerns over immigratio­n.

Post-election prediction­s showed that the far-right League party could beat Mr Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (Go Italy) party within the rightwing coalition.

That raises the prospect of League leader Matteo Salvini, who has promised to shut down gypsy Roma camps, deport hundreds of thousands of migrants and tackle the “danger” of Islam, becoming Italy’s next prime minister.

The Euroscepti­c, anti-establishm­ent Five Star Movement, which has drawn support from Italians fed up with traditiona­l parties, was predicted to come second to the coalition.

Mr Berlusconi cannot hold elected office because of a fraud conviction, but has put forward Antonio Tajani as his prime ministeria­l nominee.

“The verdict in Italy is always the same: the country is in constant instabilit­y,” Claudio Tito, columnist for La Repubblica, said.

With over half the ballots from Sunday’s national election counted, the right-wing coalition was at 37 percent, including the far-right, euroscepti­c League party with 18 percent and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (Go Italy) party with 14 percent.

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 ??  ?? BALLOT BLUNDERS: A protester confronts Silvio Berlusconi as he prepares to vote in the Italian elections. Across her chest are words which translate to: “Berlusconi, you have expired”. Below, some seemed reluctant to go into the booths in Florence.
BALLOT BLUNDERS: A protester confronts Silvio Berlusconi as he prepares to vote in the Italian elections. Across her chest are words which translate to: “Berlusconi, you have expired”. Below, some seemed reluctant to go into the booths in Florence.
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