No Poll Breakaway With 24 Hours To Go

No Poll Breakaway With 24 Hours To Go

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Overnight polls into the final day of campaigning suggest neither of the two main parties have managed to break the deadlock, with the race remaining neck and neck.

One poll suggests the Tories have sneaked a 3% lead over Labour - with UKIP enjoying its highest vote share since January.

With less one day to go, the ComRes/ITV/Daily Mail poll puts the Conservatives on 35%, up two points since the last ComRes phone poll, while Labour is down by one point to 32%.

It indicates UKIP has the third highest vote share with 14%, up one percentage point and marking its highest rating since January. The Lib Dems have also improved by one percentage point at 9%.

But the daily YouGov/TheSun poll, of more than 2,000 people, continues to put the two main parties neck and neck on 34% with UKIP on 12%, the Lib Dems at 9% and the Green Party at 5%.

And the final poll from Lord Ashcroft puts the Conservatives on 32% and Labour on 30%, UKIP on 11%, the Lib Dems on 9% and the Green Party on 7%.

A Survation poll for the Mirror puts Labour on 34% and the Conservatives on 33%, with UKIP on 16%, the Lib Dems on 9% and the Green Party on 4%.

Meanwhile, a Populus poll had both Labour and Conservatives up one percentage point on 34%, the Lib Dems and the Greens improving by one percentage point on 10% and 5% respectively and UKIP down two percentage points on 13%.

Katharine Peacock, managing director of ComRes, said: "The polls have remained remarkably consistent over the course of the campaign with the Conservatives maintaining a small lead over Labour through 2015.

"Despite the TV debates, manifesto launches and policy announcements nothing seems to be shifting the dial. Much of this is down to a distinct lack of trust in politicians and political parties, indeed, half of voters do not trust them to deliver their promises.

"With this level of cynicism and one in five voting in order to stop a party they don't like from winning it is easy to see why little has changed."