Polls narrow as UK political leaders enter final campaigning day

The ruling Conservatives are predicted to get a majority but a hung parliament was not ruled out

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson prepares a pie at the Red Olive kitchen in Derby, central England on December 11, 2019 while on the campaign trail. Britain will go to the polls tomorrow to vote in a pre-Christmas general election. / AFP / POOL / Ben STANSALL
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Britain’s political leaders embarked on their final day of campaigning ahead of a Thursday election, as the opinion polls suggested the gap between the two main parties is narrowing.

The surveys still predict a majority for the ruling Conservatives, which would see Prime Minister Boris Johnson seek to take the UK out of the EU by next month, but the main opposition party Labour is gaining ground.

YouGov, which took in the views of more than 100,000 people and whose model correctly predicted no party would gain a majority in the 2017 election, refused to rule out another hung parliament.

Its study said the Conservatives were on course for a 28-seat majority – down from 68 from a forecast on November 27.

A poll by Opinium found support for Mr Johnson’s party slipped from 46 per cent to 45 per cent compared to a survey last week while Labour’s moved from 31 per cent to 33 per cent.

The failure of the Conservatives to obtain a majority two years ago has seen its efforts to take the UK out of the EU consistently repelled by parliament. It also led to the resignation of Mr Johnson’s predecessor Theresa May.

Mr Johnson, who has pitched himself as the man to end the Brexit impasse, said “it could not be tighter” and “we’re fighting for every vote” as he began the day in northern England.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, has promised to radically overhaul society "for the many, not the few” if he becomes prime minister and presented a manifesto based on sharp increases in government spending and the nationalisation of utility industries.

His economy spokesman John McDonnell led attacks on Mr Johnson on Wednesday picking up on the Conservative leader’s attempts to dodge a journalist’s questions as “cowardly, undignified and pathetic”. Mr McDonnell said the incident showed “he is not fit to be prime minister”.

Meanwhile Mr Corbyn faced more criticism for failing to tackle allegations of anti-Semitism in the party. Business leaders including television star Alan Sugar and fashion designer Anya Hindmarch, have raised fears Mr Crobyn’s programme would be damaging to the economy.

Opponents of Mr Johnson call him elitist, self-centred and out of touch. His refusal to take a ‘no-deal Brexit’ off the table, which would see the UK crash out of the EU without a withdrawal agreement, has spooked many, who fear such a scenario would lead to a recession.