<p>Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed Wednesday to "fight for every vote" after polls predicted a close finish to Britain's general election aimed at settling the Brexit crisis.</p>.<p>Britons head to the polls for the third time in four years on Thursday, against a backdrop of political deadlock since a 2016 referendum which saw a majority opt to leave the EU.</p>.<p>Parliament repeatedly refused to accept divorce terms that former prime minister Theresa May agreed with Brussels, forcing her out and bringing Johnson into the fray with a vow to deliver.</p>.<p>The former London mayor and foreign minister has been hammering home his "Get Brexit Done" message, to win a majority which would enable him to get the deal approved.</p>.<p>He has vowed to take Britain out of the bloc by January 31.</p>.<p>But a closely watched poll released late Tuesday showed his Conservative party's lead over the main opposition Labour party led by Jeremy Corbyn had narrowed.</p>.<p>The YouGov study said the Tories were on course for a 28-seat majority in the 650-seat House of Commons under Britain's first-past-the-post system.</p>.<p>On November 27, it forecast a 68-seat majority.</p>.<p>"The margin of error here could put the final number of Conservative seats from 311 to 367," YouGov said.</p>.<p>The lower end of that range would leave Britain with another hung parliament, where the biggest party does not have a majority, and the very real possibility of Brexit being delayed for years or even cancelled in a second referendum.</p>.<p>It could also end the political career of Johnson -- a sharply polarising figure whose appeal to core Tory voters made him the logical choice to replace the increasingly hapless May.</p>.<p>"This could not be more critical. It could not be tighter," Johnson said while helping to load milk bottles onto delivery vehicles on the campaign trail in northern England.</p>.<p>"We're fighting for every vote."</p>.<p>Corbyn, 70, is a passionate campaigner who confounded pollsters by coming within a whisker of winning the last election in 2017.</p>.<p>He has vowed to implement a radically left-wing programme to overhaul public services that have been hit by a decade of austerity caused by the global financial meltdown of 2008-09.</p>.<p>But his vague stance on Brexit and repeated accusations of anti-Semitism in Labour under his watch have weakened his appeal to voters, according to opinion polls.</p>.<p>Corbyn, who like Johnson is criss-crossing the country in a frantic bid for last-minute votes, told the undecided that they could vote for "hope" on Thursday.</p>.<p>"We will put money in your pocket because you deserve it. The richest and big business will pay for it," he said.</p>.<p>Corbyn's proposal for Brexit is for Labour to strike a more EU-friendly agreement with Brussels, then put it up to a fresh referendum that includes the option of staying in the bloc.</p>.<p>He has spent much of the campaign attacking the Conservatives over its plans for the taxpayer-funded National Healthcare System (NHS).</p>.<p>Labour accused Johnson of abandoning the principle of free treatment for all by opening up the NHS to "Big Pharma" in a post-Brexit trade deal with US President Donald Trump.</p>.<p>Both Johnson and Trump deny the claims.</p>.<p>Polling suggests Corbyn stands almost no chance of winning the election outright and would need smaller opposition support to become first Labour prime minister since Gordon Brown in 2010.</p>.<p>These include the pro-EU Scottish National Party (SNP) and the Liberal Democrats, which has promised to cancel Brexit altogether.</p>.<p>But SNP support for a Labour coalition government could come at the cost of a promise to back a second referendum on Scottish independence.</p>.<p>The YouGov poll said the SNP was gaining momentum and on course to win 41 seats. But it projected just 15 seats for the Liberal Democrats.</p>.<p>Analysts believe the party made a mistake by initially promising to simply cancel Brexit, with polls indicating that many pro-European Britons view such a step as undemocratic.</p>.<p>The Lib Dems now promise to back a second referendum. But this stance makes them almost indistinguishable from Corbyn's Labour.</p>.<p>Leading pollster John Curtice, from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, said Labour has been able to "squeeze" the Lib Dem vote in the past two weeks.</p>.<p>"The crucial question now is whether or not Labour can raise its boat just that little bit further such that we might get in a hung parliament territory," Curtice told BBC radio.</p>
<p>Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed Wednesday to "fight for every vote" after polls predicted a close finish to Britain's general election aimed at settling the Brexit crisis.</p>.<p>Britons head to the polls for the third time in four years on Thursday, against a backdrop of political deadlock since a 2016 referendum which saw a majority opt to leave the EU.</p>.<p>Parliament repeatedly refused to accept divorce terms that former prime minister Theresa May agreed with Brussels, forcing her out and bringing Johnson into the fray with a vow to deliver.</p>.<p>The former London mayor and foreign minister has been hammering home his "Get Brexit Done" message, to win a majority which would enable him to get the deal approved.</p>.<p>He has vowed to take Britain out of the bloc by January 31.</p>.<p>But a closely watched poll released late Tuesday showed his Conservative party's lead over the main opposition Labour party led by Jeremy Corbyn had narrowed.</p>.<p>The YouGov study said the Tories were on course for a 28-seat majority in the 650-seat House of Commons under Britain's first-past-the-post system.</p>.<p>On November 27, it forecast a 68-seat majority.</p>.<p>"The margin of error here could put the final number of Conservative seats from 311 to 367," YouGov said.</p>.<p>The lower end of that range would leave Britain with another hung parliament, where the biggest party does not have a majority, and the very real possibility of Brexit being delayed for years or even cancelled in a second referendum.</p>.<p>It could also end the political career of Johnson -- a sharply polarising figure whose appeal to core Tory voters made him the logical choice to replace the increasingly hapless May.</p>.<p>"This could not be more critical. It could not be tighter," Johnson said while helping to load milk bottles onto delivery vehicles on the campaign trail in northern England.</p>.<p>"We're fighting for every vote."</p>.<p>Corbyn, 70, is a passionate campaigner who confounded pollsters by coming within a whisker of winning the last election in 2017.</p>.<p>He has vowed to implement a radically left-wing programme to overhaul public services that have been hit by a decade of austerity caused by the global financial meltdown of 2008-09.</p>.<p>But his vague stance on Brexit and repeated accusations of anti-Semitism in Labour under his watch have weakened his appeal to voters, according to opinion polls.</p>.<p>Corbyn, who like Johnson is criss-crossing the country in a frantic bid for last-minute votes, told the undecided that they could vote for "hope" on Thursday.</p>.<p>"We will put money in your pocket because you deserve it. The richest and big business will pay for it," he said.</p>.<p>Corbyn's proposal for Brexit is for Labour to strike a more EU-friendly agreement with Brussels, then put it up to a fresh referendum that includes the option of staying in the bloc.</p>.<p>He has spent much of the campaign attacking the Conservatives over its plans for the taxpayer-funded National Healthcare System (NHS).</p>.<p>Labour accused Johnson of abandoning the principle of free treatment for all by opening up the NHS to "Big Pharma" in a post-Brexit trade deal with US President Donald Trump.</p>.<p>Both Johnson and Trump deny the claims.</p>.<p>Polling suggests Corbyn stands almost no chance of winning the election outright and would need smaller opposition support to become first Labour prime minister since Gordon Brown in 2010.</p>.<p>These include the pro-EU Scottish National Party (SNP) and the Liberal Democrats, which has promised to cancel Brexit altogether.</p>.<p>But SNP support for a Labour coalition government could come at the cost of a promise to back a second referendum on Scottish independence.</p>.<p>The YouGov poll said the SNP was gaining momentum and on course to win 41 seats. But it projected just 15 seats for the Liberal Democrats.</p>.<p>Analysts believe the party made a mistake by initially promising to simply cancel Brexit, with polls indicating that many pro-European Britons view such a step as undemocratic.</p>.<p>The Lib Dems now promise to back a second referendum. But this stance makes them almost indistinguishable from Corbyn's Labour.</p>.<p>Leading pollster John Curtice, from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, said Labour has been able to "squeeze" the Lib Dem vote in the past two weeks.</p>.<p>"The crucial question now is whether or not Labour can raise its boat just that little bit further such that we might get in a hung parliament territory," Curtice told BBC radio.</p>