General Election Polls Put Labour And The Tories Neck-And-Neck

The Polls That Show Why The Election Winner Is Really Anyone's Guess...
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Separate polls have handed both Labour and the Tories two point leads as the tight race for Number 10 shows no sign of opening up.

The Conservatives were ahead in the latest ICM poll for the Guardian but at 34% were down five points on their position a week ago. Then pollsters found David Cameron's party at a remarkable 39% and holding a six point lead.

ICM's latest poll has Labour down one point on 32%, with Ukip up four on 11% and the Liberal Democrats up 2 on 10%.

Martin Boon of ICM Unlimited said the Tory lead only emerges when results are weighted based on voters most likely to turn out.

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Down to the wire: Prime Minister David Cameron speaking during a Conservative Party rally at Christleton High School in Christleton village in Chester

He told the Guardian: "When the race is this tight, the methodological judgments made by us pollsters can become all-important."

The leading parties were reversed in a new Populus poll. Labour were unchanged on 34%, while the Conservative Party was down one, on 32%.

Populus recorded Ukip up one point on 15%, and the Liberal Democrats up one on 9%.

ICM interviewed 1,003 adults by telephone between April 17 and 19 while Populous interviewed 2,048 adults online on the same dates.

Meanwhile, another poll has found university students are around five times more likely to vote Labour or Tory than they are Liberal Democrat.

It reveals that the two major parties are tied for support on the UK's leading university campuses at 31%.

But just 6% of the more than 13,000 final-year undergraduates questioned said they plan to back the Lib Dems on May 7 - a figure the authors of the survey suggested is linked to the party's U-turn on tuition fees.

Students in the final year of a degree were the first to pay the higher, £9,000 maximum tuition fee introduced under the coalition Government in 2010 - months after the Lib Dems campaigned on a pledge to oppose any hike.

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General Election Campaign
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Labour Party leader Ed Miliband (centre) meets members of the Praise House Community Church in Croydon, where he spoke to the congregation as part of his 2015 General Election campaign tour. (credit:Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)
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Labour Party leader Ed Miliband meets members of the Praise House Community Church in Croydon, where he spoke to the congregation as part of his 2015 General Election campaign tour. (credit:Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)
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Labour Party leader Ed Miliband (left) meets members of the Praise House Community Church in Croydon, where he spoke to the congregation as part of his 2015 General Election campaign tour. (credit:Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)
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Labour Party leader Ed Miliband and Baroness Doreen Lawrence at Praise House Community Church in Croydon, where he spoke to the congregation as part of his 2015 General Election campaign tour. (credit:Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)
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Labour Party leader Ed Miliband meets Labour supporters at Chester Racecourse in Cheshire during his General Election campaign trail. (credit:Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)
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Prime Minister David Cameron speaking during a Conservative Party rally at Christleton High School in Christleton village in Chester. (credit:Chris Radburn/PA Wire)
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Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron delivers a speech to party activists at Christleton High School near Chester in northern England, April 20, 2015. REUTERS/Toby Melville (credit:TOBY MELVILLE/WPA Rota)
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Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron delivers a speech to party activists at Christleton High School near Chester in northern England, April 20, 2015. REUTERS/Toby Melville (credit:TOBY MELVILLE/WPA Rota)
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Prime Minister David Cameron (2nd right) during a visit to Arriva TrainCare in Crewe. (credit:Chris Radburn/PA Wire)
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Prime Minister David Cameron during a visit to Arriva TrainCare in Crewe. (credit:Chris Radburn/PA Wire)
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Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg makes a speech to local party activists during a visit to the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth while on the General Election campaign trail. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)
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Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg makes a speech to local party activists during a visit to the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth while on the General Election campaign trail. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)
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Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg during a visit to the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth while on the General Election campaign trail. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)
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Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg makes a speech to local party activists during a visit to the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth while on the General Election campaign trail. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)

More than half (53%) of those polled said they would not vote for the Lib Dems because of the tuition fee increase.

The latest poll, published by High Fliers Research, shows that 25% of students plan to vote for the Green Party, while 3% are backing the SNP and 1% are in favour of Ukip.

It puts the Conservatives in front at 14 out of the 30 universities in the survey, with support the greatest at Loughborough, while Labour are the front-runners at 11, with support the greatest at Liverpool University.

The Green Party is top at Leeds, while the SNP is leading at Strathclyde and Glasgow and Sinn Fein is the top choice at Queen's University Belfast.

Around 14% of students said they were undecided about which party to support or did not intend to vote.

More than nine in 10 (91%) said they plan to back the party they think has the best policies, while just over half (52%) said the next government's main priority should be to reduce the deficit.

Around two fifths (41%) intend to vote for the party with the most convincing leader, 44% think it will make little difference to them who wins next month, and nearly a third (32%) say they will be voting for the party their parents support.