Italy PM says no risk of anti-Europe government after March 4 vote

BERLIN (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni said on Friday he expected a stable government to emerge from national elections on March 4, as final opinion polls showed likely deadlock. Speaking at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin, Gentiloni, whose Democratic Party polls a close third place in the most recent surveys, said: "Italy will have a government, it will have a stable government. I don't think there is any risk it will have a government dominated by populist and anti-European positions." No party or coalition has sufficient support to build a clear parliamentary majority, according to the polls, but an alliance between former premier Silvio Berlusconi and two anti-EU far-right parties has the best chance of governing alone. "I think the only possible bulwark of a stable and pro-European government is the center-left coalition led by the PD," Gentiloni added. (Reporting by Isla Binnie; Editing by Crispian Balmer)