Article Photos: Dutch prepare for conservative-Labor coalition



  Dutch populist firebrand Geert Wilders, right, addresses his supporters after exit polls results for the parliamentary elections were announced in The Hague, Netherlands, Wednesday Sept. 12, 2012. While the winner of the Dutch national elections is not yet certain, the biggest loser appears certain to be Geert Wilders, the leader of the anti-Europe, anti-immigration Freedom Party. Wilders, best known for his harsh anti-Islam rhetoric, gambled that the public sentiment in the Netherlands was sufficiently negative over the euro currency that he based his campaign on bashing the European Union. (AP Photo/Jan-Joseph Stok)

Dutch populist firebrand Geert Wilders, right, addresses his supporters after exit polls results for the parliamentary elections were announced in The Hague, Netherlands, Wednesday Sept. 12, 2012. While the winner of the Dutch national elections is not yet certain, the biggest loser appears certain to be Geert Wilders, the leader of the anti-Europe, anti-immigration Freedom Party. Wilders, best known for his harsh anti-Islam rhetoric, gambled that the public sentiment in the Netherlands was sufficiently negative over the euro currency that he based his campaign on bashing the European Union. (AP Photo/Jan-Joseph Stok)