Dutch election: Pro-Europe VVD and Labour parties win Published duration 13 September 2012

image caption Mark Rutte is poised to return as prime minister

Voters in the Netherlands have backed two pro-European centrist parties, while the anti-immigrant Geert Wilders' Eurosceptic party took heavy losses.

Prime Minister Mark Rutte claimed victory for his liberal VVD party. Centre-left Labour came a close second.

Both parties performed better than predicted, seeking a pan-European solution to the eurozone crisis.

Mr Rutte said he was working hard to form a coalition but would not be drawn on whether he would approach Labour.

The two leading parties have enough seats between for a workable coalition - but would have to reconcile very different views on austerity.

The VVD took 41 seats in the 150-member lower house, three more than Labour.

Dutch voters returned to parties of the centre, following recent elections which produced highly fragmented results and multi-party coalitions.

The Freedom Party of Geert Wilders, which is known for being fiercely anti-Islam, and campaigned on a Eurosceptic platform, won 15 seats, well down on its previous 24.

The Socialist Party, which briefly led in opinion polls, came joint third with 15 seats, the same result as at the 2010 election.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said the election outcome strengthened Europe and weakened populists and nationalists.

'Radio silence'

"As leader of the largest party I feel a particular sense of responsibility and therefore I don't want to comment [on coalition deals]," said Mr Rutte after meeting his party's MPs on Thursday. "I'm calling for radio silence."

Formal talks on forming a new government cannot start until next week, after the election result is officially confirmed.

image caption Diederik Samsom took his Labour Party into second place

Labour Party leader Diederik Samsom, who has advocated spending on job-creation programmes, indicated he would bargain hard in coalition talks.

"Nobody knows exactly what will happen tomorrow, but one thing is certain: the course can be changed," he said.

"The course must be changed because the right-wing policies of the past two years cannot continue."

Mr Samsom's approach has been broadly seen as a nod to the policies of France's recently elected Socialist President, Francois Hollande, who wants to increase spending and raise taxes on the rich.

Mr Rutte's policy echoes German Chancellor Angel Merkel's plans of strictly adhering to austerity measures that are designed to force down the country's deficit.

Analysts say the outcome will be significant for Germany's campaign for fiscal discipline in the eurozone.

The election was called after the Freedom Party withdrew its support for Mr Rutte's budget cuts six months ago.