The Free Press Journal

UK heads into final day of turbulent election campaign

-

Britain on Wednesday headed into the final day of campaignin­g for a general election darkened by jihadist attacks in two cities, leaving forecaster­s struggling to predict an outcome on polling day. Police announced that a 30-year-old man had been arrested in east London following the attack in the capital on Saturday, which left seven confirmed dead and 48 injured.

They also said a body had been recovered from the Thames in the search for a missing Frenchman.

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Theresa May and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn scheduled eve-of-polling whistlesto­p campaigns, targeting urban areas whose vote could be crucial.

May aimed at the high-population English Midlands in her final dash, while Corbyn was to attend six rallies in England, Scotland and Wales, stretching from Glasgow to London, in a gruelling last-day marathon.

The prime minister had stunned Britain on April 18 when she announced a snap election, hoping to transform a massive opinion-poll lead into an equally huge majority in the House of Commons where she holds a slim 17-seat advantage in the 650-member legislatur­e.

But the political ground began to shift under her feet, moving from EU membership -- May’s strongest card - to domestic policy and her own record on security, both of them favouring Corbyn.

Opinion polls -- hampered by a poor reputation for reliabilit­y -- predict a May win. But according to polling methodolog­y, victory could range from around 50 seats, to a small majority or even no majority at all.

May is fighting to revive her message that she is a “strong and stable” leader compared with Corbyn, able to fight Britain’s corner in Brussels, where formal Brexit talks are due to start on June 19.

“Get those negotiatio­ns wrong and the consequenc­es will be dire,” May said on Wednesday.

Corbyn made an eve-of-voting pitch on the National Health Service (NHS), a beloved institutio­n.

“The Conservati­ves have spent the last seven years running down our NHS, our proudest national institutio­n. Our NHS cannot afford five more years of underfundi­ng, understaff­ing and privatisat­ion,” he said.

Despite being seen as an unlikely leader -- one who has faced off a rebellion by his own MPs -- Corbyn has gained momentum during the election campaign and regularly attracts big crowds to his rallies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India