The newly-elected Italian Parliament sat for the first time on Friday but – if the start of proceedings is anything to go by – the country faces a prolonged period of chaos and political deadlock.

Parliament’s first task is to elect two speakers, one each for the lower and upper houses. But warring parties from the election earlier this month appear to have failed what was seen as a test of the country’s ability to form a viable government in the coming weeks.

The 4 March vote gave no clear majority to any political party or coalition, but there was talk of an alliance forming between the two populist leaders who took the most votes.

​Matteo Salvini is the leader of the eurosceptic, anti-immigrant Northern League, itself the frontrunner from within a right-wing coalition that collectively reached 37 per cent in the election. Mr Salvini aspires to be Prime Minister and thereby the most powerful far-right leader in Europe, but he has to deal with resistance from both his own allies – Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia – and with Luigi Di Maio, leader of the populist 5 Star Movement (M5S), the most voted-for individual party with 32 per cent.

The head of state, President Sergio Mattarella, won’t start government consultations until the two speakers are elected. But if Friday’s first vote was a thermometer for alliances, then the hunt for an agreement seems to have gone very cold indeed.

At first, Mr Di Maio and Mr Salvini tried to put in place a pact concerning the two candidates to be elected, with M5S leading the Chamber of Deputies and the right-wing coalition choosing the speaker of the Senate.

Such an agreement would have been a starting point to move on to discussions about forming a government too. But then Mr Berlusconi – whose Forza Italia gained a disappointing 13 per cent compared with Northern League’s 17 per cent – broke up the team.

Mr Berlusconi’s manoeuvre was to ask M5S to start a dialogue with Forza Italia instead. Inevitably, this provoked the opposite reaction, with the idea of any dealings with convicted fraudster Mr Berlusconi provoking outrage among the “Grillini”, M5S supporters named after the party’s founder Beppe Grillo.

Mr Di Maio’s movement attracted lots of support from former left-wing voters who felt betrayed by the Democratic Party, the clear loser in the election, in which the left suffered its worst-ever result. Since its foundation under Mr Grillo, M5S has stood for nothing more than the fight against corruption in politics. As such, Mr Di Maio’s party has declared a red line that they won’t legitimise Mr Berlusconi by engaging in talks with him.

Aside from his own tax fraud conviction, which barred him from personally standing for office at this election, the 81-year-old Mr Berlusconi even managed to propose a man to be speaker of the Senate, Paolo Romani, who has himself been convicted for embezzlement.