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Major parties in Italy's
general election
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 PM Silvios Berlusconi,
who leads the conservative center-right
coalition
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 Former premier and EU
chief Romano Prodi, who leads the center-left
bloc
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Italians
have elected the country's 61st government since the World War
II.
Parties taking part in
the elections are divided into two blocs -- the conservative
center-right coalition led by Prime Minister Silvios Berlusconi and
the center-left bloc headed by former premier and EU chief Romano
Prodi.
Major parties in the center-right coalition
include:
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Forza Italia, formed in 1994 by Berlusconi;
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The right-wing National Alliance, a former Neo-Fascist party that
has turned into mainstream conservative;
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The Northern League, known for its anti-immigrant and tough stance
on crime;
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The centrist Union of Christian Democrats, one of several small
parties created after the collapse of the Christian Democrats in the
early 1990s.
Major parties in the center-left include:
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The Democrats of the Left, the largest opposition party;
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The moderate Daisy party;
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The environmentalist Greens;
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Two Communist parties.
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