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TREVOR KAVANAGH

Jeremy Corbyn can’t win the election but Boris Johnson may still lose to tactical voters

THE polls are crystal clear. Boris Johnson will win by a landslide on Thursday, get Brexit done and unleash a pent-up cash tsunami into the British economy.

Or he will lose by a whisker, giving the keys of No10 to the most revolutionary PM in history and triggering a constitutional and economic crisis lasting decades.

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Jeremy Corbyn can't win the election but Boris Johnson may still lose to tactical voters, writes Trevor Kavanagh
This election will decide whether Brexit is put to bed for good - opening the way to years of prosperity

Sun readers — whose votes will decide this election — will not willingly hand power to a man who chooses enemies such as the IRA, Russia or Hamas over our friends in the West.

Nobody wants to go back to the bad old days when strike-happy trade union barons held the nation to ransom.

But all this might happen by accident.

It would take only a few thousand voters in key marginals — egged on by pro-Brussels fanatics Tony Blair and John Major — to turn the tables on the country’s overwhelming Brexit majority.

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This is a turning-point election. It will decide whether the biggest issue of our age is put to bed for good, opening the way to years of prosperity, or reignited with alarming consequences.

The polls agree on one thing — Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party, invaded by an uncouth and violent rabble, has no chance of winning outright. Most voters, especially the 52 per cent who voted Out in 2016, want a government to deliver Brexit.

They certainly don’t want the only other option — a chaotic coalition with the Scottish National Party yanking the chain of the UK Parliament in Westminster.

They do not want a second EU referendum — nor a re-run of Scottish independence.

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TACTICAL VOTERS

Yet the balance could lie with tactical voters and first-timers, who are political blank sheets of paper.

For under-30s, the harsh lessons of Communist tyranny over Eastern Europe, Russia and China are ancient history.

The tragedy of recently rich Venezuela is a brutal example of Corbyn-style economics in action, but Caracas is a faraway place of which they know little.

Nobody under the age of 40 recalls the Winter Of Discontent, when public sector unions held Britain to ransom. Luckily, they don’t need to.

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For Remainers, France is the living embodiment of the EU Grand Project. Yet France has been set ablaze by over-mighty unions at war with the state.

For Corbyn — and for Blair and Major it seems — this is the way forward.

Trust is another big issue in this election, especially trust in Boris Johnson. It is a smear deployed by lying Labour and duplicitous Lib Dems.

They pillory Boris over his private life, while thrice-married Jeremy Corbyn — not counting his trysts with Diane Abbott and others — is hailed a sandwich-eating saint.

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Boris, fluent in Ancient Greek, Latin and other languages, is portrayed as a buffoon by a man whose ex-wives say has never read a book. This is the dirtiest campaign ever waged, not just on TV and radio, but on the streets.

DIRTIEST CAMPAIGN EVER

Most of the dirt is thrown by Momentum Corbynistas to silence and intimidate opponents.

Corbyn does nothing to curb the thugs nor rein in the ugly anti-Semitism poisoning once proudly pro-Jewish Labour.

But voters are not stupid. They can see what’s going on. And they don’t like it. If the polls are right, we really are witnessing a revolution, but not for Marxism.

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Lifelong Labour supporters in strongholds across the Midlands and the North are ditching Labour and switching to Boris. Most voted Brexit but were ignored, not just by Corbyn, but by so-called workers’ champions Keir Starmer and Yvette Cooper.

Now voters are turning on their party in seats such as Bolsover, held for ever by Dennis Skinner. Cooper might lose hers, too. The so-called Red Wall is crumbling.

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Even in this age of social equality, patriotism still counts. Prince Andrew may be in trouble, but most Labour voters admire the Queen. They actually watch her broadcast after Christmas lunch. They heartily loathe Corbyn’s disloyalty.

Now is the time for all good men and women — Leavers AND Remainers — to come to the aid of the party.

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Sun readers, vote Tory . . .  even if it is for the first and last time.

Tactical voting could lead to a chaotic coalition with the Scottish National Party yanking the chain of the UK Parliament in WestminsterCredit: AP:Associated Press

OBVIOUS CHOICE

BRITAIN will pay the price – or win the prize – as markets open the morning after polls close.

A hung Parliament will see billions flooding instantly OUT of Britain, perhaps for ever.

A Boris triumph, by contrast, will see a tidal wave of cash coming IN.

The Bank of England thinks firms have been sitting on a £423billion money mountain since the referendum.

Investors here and overseas have £116billion ready to go, while hedge funds have another £400billion to spend.

We’re spoilt for choice.

Jeremy Corbyn sparks fury after leaving out Jewish people in list of minorities he vows to defend



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