David Cameron and European Union

: With neither Prime Minister David Cameron Conservatives nor Ed Miliband Labour expected to win a majority on Thursday and smaller parties on the rise, the election could also confirm a shift to a fragmented style of politics more familiar in other parts of Europe, according to Nine News Australia. A Conservative win could raise the risk of Britain exiting the European Union because Cameron has promised a referendum on membership, while some business leaders and investors have warned Labour could be bad for the economy. AFPBritain political leaders have launched their last day of campaigning for the most unpredictable election in living memory which could yield no clear winner and weeks of haggling over the next government. Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, leader of the centrist Liberal Democrats, has even suggested there could be another election this year if an unstable minority government takes power. It would be a tragedy if we threw away all the hard work of the past five years and went back to square one," Cameron wrote in The Times newspaper on Wednesday. Cameron and Miliband, whose parties are virtually tied in opinion polls, have both embarked on frenetic tours of the country in a last-minute scramble for votes."Britain future is on a knife-edge. (news.financializer.com). As reported in the news.

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