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Vote DECISIVELY to stop Britain walking blindly into disaster
By Daily Mail
Last updated at 4:59 PM on 5th May 2010
Tomorrow voters face a choice that could shape our way of life and our country's place in the world for generations to come.
For this nail-biting election falls at a moment of extreme peril for Britain - a £3trillion crisis far more serious than any political party has had the honesty to spell out.
But then, truly, this has been a phoney campaign, enlivened only by the X-Factor drama of the televised debates and the calamitously embarrassing aftermath of Gordon Brown's encounter with an ordinary Labour voter.
Decision time: A hung parliament could lead Britain towards disaster
Obscuring the issues still further has been the near-universal disgust with the political class, provoked by years of lies and sleaze, culminating in the Commons expenses scandal.
And it's this public rage - the urge to wish 'a plague on all your houses' - that partly explains the most remarkable aspect of the campaign: the Liberal Democrats' surge in the polls and the emergence of a widespread belief that a hung parliament, giving nobody a clear victory, would be a desirable outcome.
By Daily Mail
Last updated at 4:59 PM on 5th May 2010
Tomorrow voters face a choice that could shape our way of life and our country's place in the world for generations to come.
For this nail-biting election falls at a moment of extreme peril for Britain - a £3trillion crisis far more serious than any political party has had the honesty to spell out.
But then, truly, this has been a phoney campaign, enlivened only by the X-Factor drama of the televised debates and the calamitously embarrassing aftermath of Gordon Brown's encounter with an ordinary Labour voter.

Decision time: A hung parliament could lead Britain towards disaster
Obscuring the issues still further has been the near-universal disgust with the political class, provoked by years of lies and sleaze, culminating in the Commons expenses scandal.
And it's this public rage - the urge to wish 'a plague on all your houses' - that partly explains the most remarkable aspect of the campaign: the Liberal Democrats' surge in the polls and the emergence of a widespread belief that a hung parliament, giving nobody a clear victory, would be a desirable outcome.