Mercury (Hobart)

Poll is on a knife edge

BORIS’ DESPERATE PLEA FOR ‘EVERY LAST VOTE’

- STEPHEN DRILL and RICHARD FERGUSON

BORIS Johnson implored his supporters to keep knocking on doors until 10pm (9am today AEST) when the UK election polls close to secure “every last vote” to get a majority.

The British Prime Minister gave his rallying cry on the final day of campaignin­g, saying there would be GBP150 billion ($287 billion) of investment waiting when he gets Brexit done.

Mr Johnson, whose lead again narrowed in polls overnight, needs 322 seats to get a majority — and there remains a chance of a hung parliament, which would kill Brexit.

Voters will battle snow to get to the polls in some areas in the first election in December since 1923 in a country without compulsory voting.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn quoted a Chilean poet in his final campaign speech, as he vowed to increase corporatio­n taxes to 26 per cent to pay for his spending promises on the National Health Service, schools and free broadband for all.

Mr Johnson, 55, said Mr Corbyn’s plans were unaffordab­le, adding he wanted to have a “final sprint to a golden future” while he would invest in the NHS and cut the cost of living.

But a new poll from Opinium showed the Conservati­ves down one point to 45 and Labour up two points to 33 with 10 per cent of voters to decide on election day.

Another poll put Mr Johnson’s lead at just six points, with the Conservati­ves on 41 per cent to Labour’s 36 per cent in the Savanta ComRes survey. And there were concerns the Brexit party, led by Nigel Farage, could stop the Conservati­ves taking 16 seats.

Mr Johnson said: “We need to find every vote we can … we know we can’t trust polls.

“Let’s make sure we don’t waste a minute, let’s talk to everyone of our friends, let’s talk to everyone up and down the country. Reach out to every one of our neighbours and let’s make sure we give

children and our grandchild­ren the future they deserve.”

In a rally in an Olympic venue in Stratford, East London, Mr Johnson was his usual confident, charismati­c self as he warned of Labour’s planned tax and spend increases.

“All labour government­s end in economic disaster,” he said. “If these guys get in it would start with an economic disaster. “Now is the time for this amazing country to come together and to remember what it is capable of achieving.

“Let’s be carbon neutral by 2050 and Corbyn neutral by Christmas.”

The day ended better than it started for Mr Johnson, who hid in a fridge when he was hijacked by a TV crew for Piers Morgan’s Good Morning Britain program.

He had refused to go on to the show, which has been a trap for some politician­s during the campaign, with one of his aides dropping a four-letter word which went live on air.

The Conservati­ves have been hammering their “Get Brexit done” message while Labour has run an almost exclusive campaign on protecting the National Health Service.

Labour has set aside most of the discussion about its policies including nationalis­ing major companies and increasing taxes. Their arguments have been winning some weight because government cuts overall since the Global Financial Crisis have hit wages across the country, and because of the emotions that British people attach to the NHS.

However, Mr Corbyn’s unpopulari­ty has been a significan­t hit on Labour’s chances, with many suggesting he would be replaced even if Labour got in on a minority government ticket.

He refused to say whether he would resign if Labour lost, saying he was confident of victory despite a “relentless media assault”.

Mr Corbyn, 70, quoted Chilean poet Victor Jara, a singer whose fingers were cut off in a 1973 coup there: “My guitar is not for the rich, no, nothing like that, my song is of the ladder we are building to reach the stars,” he said to applause from the Labour crowd.

Meanwhile, Kensington in west London is one of the key marginals, with Labour holding it by only 20 votes.

On Portobello Road — where the Hugh Grant-Julia

Roberts hit film Notting Hill was filmed — voters were still divided yesterday.

Josh Marks, 23, was leaning Lib Dem. He’s anti-Brexit and anti-Boris, but he cannot bring himself to vote Labour due to its anti-Semitism crisis.

“I’m from a Jewish family. How could Corbyn’s anti-Semitic stuff not sway me? But Boris has said a lot of offensive things too,” he said.

Notting Hill mum Chloe, 39, said she was a lifelong Conservati­ve voter who was now willing to back Jeremy Corbyn to stop Brexit: “I don’t like Boris, don’t like his style of leadership, and the only way I think we can stop a hard Brexit is voting Labour,” she said.

Ian McAllister, 67, wants the Tory candidate Felicity Buchan to take the seat and worries that tactical voters will lead to a socialist “nightmare”.

“Corbyn is a nightmare, that’s what he is. And I am concerned that people around here are going to allow him to take power,” Mr McAllister said.

“Leaving under Boris’s deal will be much better for this country, for people in this area, than a Corbyn government.

“I just hope common sense kicks in.”

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