London / AFP
Rival sides threw their efforts into the final day of campaigning on Wednesday, on the eve of Britain’s vote on EU membership that will shape the future of Europe.
Prime Minister David Cameron conducted a spate of last-minute interviews to get his pro-EU message to voters before polls open at 0600 GMT on Thursday.
“Nobody knows what is going to happen,” he told the Financial Times. “I believe it will one way or another be decisive. Britain will not want to go through this again.”
The “Remain” camp has the slimmest possible lead on 51 percent versus 49 percent support for the “Leave” side, according to an average of polls compiled by What UK Thinks.
In a final push to win over the undecided voters who could tip the referendum, campaigners will speak at rival “Leave” and “Remain” rallies taking place within hours of each other in London.
Representatives from both sides will then meet in a final television debate on Channel 4 featuring anti-EU UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage and former Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond for “Remain”.
The prospect of Britain becoming the first state to defect from the EU in the bloc’s 60-year history has raised fears of a domino-effect collapse of the European project.
European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker earlier Britain against “an act of self-harm” he said would endanger everything Europeans had worked together to achieve.
‘Lies. Greedy elites’
Two newspapers used their Wednesday front pages for last-minute endorsements of opposite sides of the campaign.
“Lies. Greedy elites. Or a great future outside a broken, dying Europe,” wrote the Daily Mail. “If you believe in Britain vote Leave.”
But the Daily Mirror urged readers to back EU membership “for your jobs… for your children… for Britain’s future”.
The campaign has been fought over the two key issues of the economy and immigration, with both sides accusing the other of “scaremongering”.
The Mirror described it as “the most divisive, vile and unpleasant political campaign in living memory.”
Around the world, events will be held to mark what would have been the 42nd birthday of lawmaker Jo Cox, who was murdered last week on a village street in her electoral district in northern England, upending the campaign.
Her alleged killer, Thomas Mair, is due to appear in court for a preliminary hearing. In his first court appearance, he gave his name as “Death to traitors, freedom for Britain”.
The murder raised concerns that the debate had stirred ugly currents.
Cox’s widower Brendan said his wife, a noted pro-EU campaigner who advocated for refugee rights, had been killed because of her political views. “She worried about the tone of the [referendum] debate… The tone of whipping up fears and whipping up hatred potentially,” he told the BBC.