The Hague — Dutch people voted on Wednesday in an election seen as a test of nationalist feeling magnified by a furious row with Turkey and the first of three polls in 2017 in the EU, where anti-immigrant parties are seeking advances. The centre-right VVD party of Prime Minister Mark Rutte is vying with the PVV (Party for Freedom) of anti-Islam and anti-EU firebrand Geert Wilders to win most seats in parliament. As many as 13-million voters were eligible to cast ballots. A charged campaign, plus clear skies and sunshine, meant a high turnout was expected. With as many as four out of 10 voters still undecided on Tuesday and a tight margin of 4% between leading candidates, the outcome was unpredictable. Wilders, who has vowed to "de-Islamicise" the Netherlands, has virtually no chance of forming a government given that all the leading parties have ruled out working with him, but a PVV win would still send shock waves across Europe. The vote is the first gauge this year of anti-establi...

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