Belfast Telegraph

Polls point to a slim Tory win as parties enter home straight

- BY GAVIN CORDON

LEADERS of the main parties were last night engaged in a frantic final drive for votes in a General Election both Tories and Labour have described as the most important in a generation.

With just hours to go before polls open this morning, Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn were criss-crossing the country in a final bid to win over wavering voters.

Final opinion polls suggested that while the Conservati­ves remained in front, they were not guaranteed an overall majority.

The Prime Minister’s day got off to a bumpy start after he was accused of hiding in a fridge on live TV to avoid a reporter pressing him for an interview on ITV’s Good Morning Britain.

Mr Johnson insisted he was “fighting for every vote” as his campaign tour took him through South Yorkshire, the East Midlands and South Wales.

“This could not be more critical. It could not be tighter. I just say to everybody the risk is very real that we could tomorrow be going into another hung parliament,” he told reporters.

His itinerary included photo opportunit­ies on a milk round — intended to highlight his promise to deliver Brexit — and at a bakery to illustrate his “oven-ready” deal.

He later concluded his campaignin­g by attending a large rally at the Copper Box in Stratford, east London, a venue used during the London 2012 Olympics.

The Tory leader asked if the crowd of several hundred were “pumped up”, “energised” and “motivated”, to which they shouted “yes”.

Mr Johnson said: “I sincerely hope so, everybody.”

Mr Corbyn started his last day of campaignin­g in Glasgow South West with a promise of “real hope” for voters affected by years of austerity.

Later, at a rally of supporters in Middlesbro­ugh, he brushed off the evidence of the polls to insist Labour could still win.

“Of course we are going to do it — no problem at all,” Mr Corbyn said.

“We are campaignin­g all over the country, with thousands of people on the streets carrying a message of hope.”

He said Labour had raised £5m for its election campaign so far, largely from small donations.

Meanwhile, Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson was concentrat­ing her efforts on the area around London and Surrey, where the party is hoping to pick up seats.

They include Esher and Walton, where polls have suggested Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab may be vulnerable despite a majority of more than 23,000 at the 2017 general election.

Ms Swinson said the polls showed it was still “absolutely possible” to deny the Tories an overall majority through tactical voting.

“We know from past elections that very often voters who vote tactically come to that conclusion in the final hours before they cast their vote,” she added.

Scottish First Minister Nicola

Sturgeon was out with SNP candidates in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Stirling and Dunbartons­hire, while Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage was in South Yorkshire.

Speaking in Doncaster, Mr Farage said he was hoping for “very, very heavy rain” in the town today in the belief that it would depress the votes of the other parties.

“I know that people who are going to vote for us will turn out because they absolutely believe in our message. They believe in their hearts as well as in their heads,” he said.

A final constituen­cy-by-constituen­cy poll by YouGov forecast that the Conservati­ves were on course for a 28-seat majority.

However, it warned that the margin of error, together with the unknown impact of tactical voting, meant a hung parliament was still possible, as is a larger Tory majority.

The pollsters, who have analysed more than 100,000 voter interviews over the past week, calculated the Tories would win 339 seats and Labour 231.

A 28-seat majority would be the best Tory result since Margaret Thatcher’s showing in 1987, but it is sharply down from the 68-seat victory margin that was forecast just two weeks ago.

Chris Curtis, YouGov’s political research manager, said: “The margins are extremely tight.

“Small swings in a small number of seats, perhaps from tactical voting and a continuati­on of Labour’s recent upward trend, means that we cannot currently rule out a hung parliament.”

 ??  ?? Nigel Farage on the campaign trial in Yorkshire and Nicola Sturgeon in Scotland
Nigel Farage on the campaign trial in Yorkshire and Nicola Sturgeon in Scotland
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