EU referendum promise dramatically reduces Labour’s lead
David Cameron's promise to hold a referendum on EU membership has slashed Labour's lead in several polls.
A clutch of weekend polls all saw Ed Miliband's double digit lead cut to single digits, as well as a reduction in the Ukip vote.
You Gov's poll for the Sunday times put the Tories up five on 33%, with Labour just six points ahead. Ukip were down four points to ten per cent.
An Angus Reid poll for the Sunday Express saw the Conservatives rise three points, while a Survation poll for the Mail on Sunday put them up two points, with Ukip losing two points.
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Polling suggests the public is evenly split on how it would vote in an EU referendum, with 43% backing leaving in a Com Res poll for the Independent on Sunday and Sunday Mirror, compared to 33% saying they would rather stay.
Forty-per cent of people told a Populus poll for the Times they would leave, compared to 37% saying they would stay. Twenty-three per cent were undecided.
A You Gov survey saw 40% saying they would leave, with 38% saying they would stay.
Once voters are asked how they would vote if David Cameron secured an attractive package of repatriated powers, the odds for a vote staying in the EU are radically improved.