The result of the June 23 referendum will have far-reaching consequences for politics, the economy, defence, migration and diplomacy in Britain and elsewhere.
Recent polls are suggesting that momentum has swung towards the "Leave" camp, or a so called Brexit, unsettling investors. "Leave" in recent days has focused its campaign on the issue of immigration.
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Last Monday The Times/YouGov had reported a 1 per cent lead for the "Remain" campaign. In another, though not unexpected, boost for "Leave," media tycoon Rupert Murdoch's Sun newspaper called on its readers to vote to quit the 28-member EU.
"The Sun urges everyone to vote Leave. We must set ourselves free from dictatorial Brussels," said the tabloid, which has a circulation of 1.7 million.
Other polls published on Monday also put "Leave" ahead, while betting odds on Brexit narrowed.
An ORB poll for The Daily Telegraph put support for "Leave" at 49 per cent, compared with Remain's 48 per cent, while two ICM polls, one online and one conducted by telephone, found "Out" held 53 per cent support compared with 47 per cent support for "In," the Guardian newspaper, which sponsored the telephone poll said. That compared with a 52-48 per cent split in favour of "Out" in ICM polls two weeks ago, the Guardian said. Those polls excluded respondents who answered "don't know."A poll published on Friday which gave "Out" a 10 per centage-point lead added to pressure on sterling and pushed the cost of hedging against huge swings in the exchange rate to record highs. ICM said it interviewed 1,000 adults by telephone and 2,001 adults online between June 10 and 13. Including people who said they did not know how they would vote, the telephone poll showed 50 per cent of people backed "Out," 45 per cent supported "In," and 5 per cent were classed as "don't know", ICM said.
The online poll showed "Out" leading "In" by 49 per cent to 44 per cent with 7 per cent saying they did not know how to vote.
Both polls showed falls in the share of "don't knows," ICM said.
"As we close on referendum day, evidently minds are being made up," ICM Director Martin Boon said in a statement.
Opinion pollsters are under pressure because they failed to forecast both Prime Minister David Cameron's unexpectedly decisive election victory and the result of Israel's election last year.
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