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The far-right candidate made the claims following protests outside Rotterdam’s Turkish consulate as relations between the two nations continue to deteriorate. Wilders also described the Netherland’s Labour Party’s slogan, “the Netherlands belongs to us all”, as “rubbish” and claimed "the Netherlands does not belong to all of us".

GETTY Geert Wilders has blasted protestors as the dispute between the Netherlands and Turkey continues

The PVV leader, renowned for his anti-Islam outbursts and Eurosceptic views, is set to battle with Prime Minister Mark Rutte to form the biggest party in the Dutch parliament. Although all the leading parties have ruled out the possibility of working with Mr Wilders, a win for the 53-year-old firebrand would send tremors throughout the sprawling European superstate and would represent the latest victory for populist sentiment.

The top moments from the Dutch Elections Thu, March 16, 2017 Geert Wilders is battling the current Prime Minister Mark Rutte in the Dutch Elections 2017 Play slideshow 1 of 30

The election race has been overshadowed by a growing dispute between the Netherlands and Turkey after Mr Rutte banned Turkish ministers from speaking in Rotterdam as part of a row over Ankara’s political campaigning among emigres. The Dutch leader has said "inflammatory remarks" by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, who compared the Dutch to the Nazis, would not help de-escalate a diplomatic row between the two countries. Mr Erdogan is looking to win clinch the votes of 400,000 Turks living in the Netherlands to help him win sweeping new powers in a referendum in Turkey on April 16.

GETTY Polls open at 6.30am GMT tomorrow morning in what could be a knife edge election

Meanwhile, recent polling suggests support for Mr Wilders is declining as 13 million Dutch voters get ready to go to the polls tomorrow. One poll, from Peil.nl, predicts that Mr Wilders will win 22 seats and Mr Rutte will get 24 - well below the 76 seats needed to form a majority.

GETTY Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte is Wilders' main rival