Ask yourself this question: who is this country run for – the richest and most powerful, or the working families of Britain?

David Cameron is trying to tell you the biggest problem facing Britain today is a clash of two nations – England and Scotland. Don’t be fooled. If I am prime minister, there will be no special deals for anyone, including the energy companies, the banks or the tax avoiders.

Indeed, in these past five weeks, we have seen an extraordinary effort by the Tories to distract attention from five years of failure in which average wages are down, bills are up, the NHS is sliding backwards and a whole generation of young people are at risk of going nowhere.

We have five days to choose a different direction. I believe Britain succeeds only when working families succeed, when all our young people have the chance to progress and when our NHS serves our children and our grandchildren as well as it served us.

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Labour will ensure the recovery gets out of the City of London and reaches the front door of families across Britain. That means raising the minimum wage to £8 an hour, freezing energy bills until 2017, scrapping the cruel ineffective bedroom tax immediately, banning exploitative zero-hours contracts and protecting those tax credits and child benefits at risk from the extreme cuts planned in a Tory second term.

It means extending free childcare for working families with three and four-year-olds, encouraging enterprise with a reduction in business rates, and cutting annual student tuition fees to £6,000.

It means tackling the housing crisis by building the homes local people need, putting first-time buyers first and giving Generation Rent better protection against being ripped off.

And all this can be done only by building on a strong economic foundation of balancing the books, cutting the deficit every year and showing how our promises can be paid for.

In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Show all 10 1 /10 In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Andrew Hawkins (ComRes) “The sclerotic, negative and risk-averse campaigns from the two main parties make it hard to see how much can alter. So, my prediction is the same – Tories get most votes, but Labour better placed to form a government. Then a long spell of political and perhaps constitutional chaos.” Andrew Hawkins In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Joe Twyman (YouGov) “‘The world is changed, I feel it in the water, I feel it in the earth. I smell it in the air.’ So begins the film version of Lord of the Rings. – which is, of course, the famous tale of an epic journey culminating in the final battle between good and evil. The world of British politics has certainly changed. “With a few days still to go I expect that more change could still occur, but it is likely to be minor and the national level and more concentrated on the ground in the key marginal constituencies where the Hold Your Nose or Cut It Off to Spite Your Face™ message pushes home. I expect the Conservatives to be the beneficiaries, but it will not be anything like enough to make a difference to the overall result.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Ben Page (Ipsos MORI) “As the only pollster to correctly predict a hung parliament last time – and then foolishly change my prediction when I saw ALL the others were saying a Conservative majority – I am going to say hung parliament again. With more Conservative than Labour seats. The SNP won’t wipe out the Labour Party completely in Scotland but will get them down to single figures. The Lib Dems will out perform their poll numbers and should get circa 26 seats – or more. Ukip will be delighted with four seats at most, probably fewer.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Rick Nye (Populus) “Tories largest party, comfortably.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Nick Moon (GfK) “SNP now 50, Ukip 2; Tories to be largest party in votes and seats, but still a Labour minority government.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Damian Lyons Lowe (Survation) “Conservatives – I’m upgrading my seats prediction to 270-280 from 260-280. Labour – downgrading again to 265-275, based on the SNPs’ continued surge and Conservatives doing better in our seat-voting question as the election draws near and views are localised: SNP 45; Lib Dems 30; Ukip 6; Green 1; Respect 1. Ed Miliband will be the next prime minister.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Michelle Harrison (TNS) “We enter the last few days of this campaign pretty much where we started. This election represents what happens when a country is not confident about its economic future, unsure of its place in the world, and fed up with the state of its politics. “The political stalemate at the centre, and the fragmentation of the traditional party system, has left us with a set of polls incapable of telling what will ultimately happen, when there are so many potential scenarios. What we can feel confident about though is that Thursday will be a seismic night for politics in Scotland. When the votes are counted, we expect the Tories to be the largest party, but that Labour should still have the greatest chance of forming a government. But how do we measure the advantage for the Conservatives of already being in No 10 in the days after the general election? The real drama will start on Friday.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 James Endersby (Opinium Research) “We saw some movement to the Tories, but the two big parties are back to being neck and neck with the Conservatives a hair’s breadth ahead. How this translates into seats or a coalition is unclear but based on our numbers we’d put the Conservatives ahead of Labour on vote share but the two parties within 10 seats of each other in the new House of Commons. The maths here gives Ed Miliband more options than David Cameron, so it might be sensible for voters to look up Ramsay MacDonald when trying to make sense of the result!” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Martin Boon (ICM) “The Tories appear to have developed a little momentum, which may or may not make any difference. I sense the now traditional herding of pollsters has begun, and the polls will coalesce around a Tory lead of between two and six points. I’ll guess at 36 per cent for the Tories and 32 per cent for Labour. The fight for third place could go either way. Beyond that I just don’t know what will happen and defer to the academics and gamblers when it comes to seat projections, and indeed when it comes to who on earth is going to form our next government. I’d like to apologise to Independent on Sunday readers for fence-sitting, but as I’ve said repeatedly of late: How should I know? I’m only a pollster.” In pictures: Experts' predictions for the General Election - 03/05/15 Lord Ashcroft (Lord Ashcroft Polls) He refuses to make predictions. “My polls are snapshots, not predictions.” Rex

Nothing undermines trust in politics more than doing what the Tories and Liberal Democrats did before the last election. Nick Clegg promised to scrap tuition fees, then trebled them. David Cameron promised to cut net migration to less than 100,000 and then let it rise to 300,000.

Now the Tories and the Liberal Democrats are at it again, pledging to protect the NHS with nothing more than an IOU. Our plan is different: real money for real action on the NHS crisis in the first years of the next parliament, paying for 20,000 more nurses and 8,000 more doctors, a guaranteed appointment with a GP in 48 hours and cancer tests and results within a week.

Today, we’re revealing new analysis showing how the extreme cuts that the Government has planned would impact on university funding – taking £1.5bn out of higher education – which can only mean higher tuition fees again. Our fully funded plan, paid for with difficult decisions on limiting pension tax relief for the richest, will cut tuition fees, cut graduate debt and cut the national debt too.

These are real pledges with a real purpose: to make Britain a more just, a more equal country. They are a better plan for a better future.

So, this election is not a battle between two nations but between two ideas for how our country is run.

It is simply too late for David Cameron to take off his jacket, pump his fist and pose as a champion of working families, because we know what he has done over the past five years and what he plans for the next five years too.