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In this Thursday, Aug. 19, 2010 photo, a saltwater crocodile named Dirty Harry snaps up a piece of chicken attached to a caricature of Australian Prim Minister Julia Gillard, right, while turning down the morsel attached to the image of opposition leader, Tony Abbott, in Darwin, Australia. After Dirty Harry successfully selected the winner of soccer World Cup earlier in the year, Labor Party supporters are hoping his taste for politicians is on track to send the incumbent government back into power in Saturday's national election.Jano Gibson

Australia could have its first minority government in 70 years, a worst-case scenario for investors, with an election-eve poll showing the ruling Labor party drawing level with the conservative opposition.

The vote looks so close, the result may have nothing to do with policy but simply come down to which leader, Prime Minister Julia Gillard or the opposition's Tony Abbott, voters like best.

The uncertainty helped pressure the Australian dollar on Friday. The Aussie was quoted at $0.8910 by late afternoon, down 0.85 per cent from late on Thursday, while the benchmark stock index fell 1 percent.

One financial analyst has tipped a 2-5 percent fall in the currency if Australia has a minority government.

Assistant Treasurer Chris Bowen said the election was so tight that a hung parliament was just a likely as either a re-elected Labor government or a victory for the conservative coalition.

"It's just so close that any of those are eminently possible," he told Reuters in a telephone interview after a Newspoll survey showed Labor and the opposition even with 50 per cent of the two-party vote.

Without a clear winner, the next government would have to rely on a handful of independent or Green MPs to form a government, leaving policies such as Labor's new mining tax in limbo and creating market uncertainty.

"Given the fact that around 40 percent of Australia's market is owned by foreign investors, any uncertainty can have a detrimental impact on markets," CommSec equities economist Savanth Sebastian told Reuters.

"If you start seeing a hung parliament or a minority victory, then the Aussie dollar could certainly come under some pressure, and likewise sharemarkets."

Two of the three key independents, who may decide who takes office in the event of a hung parliament, have said they cannot guarantee passage of a minority government budget, leaving the possibility of a fiscal crisis or a short-lived government.

Even a razor-thin win by Ms. Gillard would diminish her mandate to introduce the 30 per cent resource tax, the cornerstone policy of her campaign, and leave her weakened as she seeks to have a hostile Senate pass the tax.

Labor has also pledged to take action on climate change with a possible carbon trading scheme and to construct a $38-billion fibre-optic national broadband network. The Liberal-National opposition opposes these plans.

Ms. Gillard deposed former Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on June 24 in a desperate bid by the party to avoid electoral defeat, but she has struggled to woo voters, with many angry at the party coup that dumped Rudd.

A Reuters Poll Trend published on Wednesday showed Labor was poised for a narrow win, and the Galaxy poll on Friday tipped a narrow win for Ms. Gillard.

In a unique snap poll with an Australian twist in the city of Darwin, a 4.9 metre saltwater crocodile, which last month tipped Spain to win the World Cup, tipped a Gillard win by chomping on a chicken carcass dangled below her image.

Betting agencies show the government is still favourite and opinion polls say Ms. Gillard remains preferred prime minister.

"This is a tough, tight, close contest and in a tough, tight, close contest, the real risk is that Mr Abbott is prime minister on Sunday," said Ms. Gillard. "Tony Abbott is too great a risk to your family's future and to your local economy."

Mr. Abbott said: "Why should Australians trust Julia Gillard and Labor when even Kevin Rudd couldn't?

"A Labor win on Saturday will mean a mining tax that threatens jobs and investment. A carbon tax will drive up prices for Australian families and make our economy less competitive."

Sydney's Daily Telegraph urged voters to elect a conservative government, with a front-page headline "Yes He Can", borrowed from U.S. President Barack Obama's campaign.

The Sydney Morning Herald said Labor "deserves a second chance" since it had successfully steered Australia through the global financial crisis and avoided recession.

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