Lower taxes or more Medicare: the leaders make their final pitches to voters on ...

Scott Morrison and Bill Shorten have made their final pitches to voters on the last full day of the election campaign by appearing on breakfast TV.

The Prime Minister promised Australians lower taxes as he appeared in the nation's most marginal seat on Friday morning, warning Labor would tax the 'Australian life' if it won Saturday's election.

'I back Australians on their vision, on their ambitions, their future,' he told the Today show host Deborah Knight.

Scott Morrison (pictured) has made his final pitches to voters on the last full day of the election campaign (pictured is the Prime Minister

Scott Morrison (pictured) has made his final pitches to voters on the last full day of the election campaign (pictured is the Prime Minister 

'That's why I want to tax them less so they can keep more of what they earn and they can invest in themselves and their future.'

Mr Morrison did a live cross from Townsville in north Queensland within the ultra-marginal Labor seat of Herbert, which Cathy O'Toole won by just 37 votes in 2016.

A Galaxy poll published on Thursday showed Labor and the Liberal candidate Phillip Thompson, an Afghanistan war veteran, each tied at 50:50 after preferences.

This means minor parties like Pauline Hanson's One Nation, Katter's Australian Party and mining magnate Clive Palmer's rebranded United Australia Party could decide a series of tight races in north Queensland.

The government has gone into the election promising $158billion worth of tax cuts, over the next decade, which will see Australians earning $48,000 to $90,000 a year receive $1,080 in relief during the next financial year.

Mr Shorten, the Opposition Leader, chose to spend the morning of election eve in Sydney, where opinion polls show Labor struggling to take marginal seats from the Liberal Party and defend one of its own marginal electorates.

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten chose to spend the morning of election eve in Sydney, where opinion polls show Labor struggling to take marginal seats from the Liberal Party and defend one of its own electorates

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten chose to spend the morning of election eve in Sydney, where opinion polls show Labor struggling to take marginal seats from the Liberal Party and defend one of its own electorates

With Australia mourning the death of Labor's longest-serving prime minister Bob Hawke, aged 89, Mr Shorten vowed a government led by him would offer stability, following the overthrow of Liberal PMs Tony Abbott in 2015 and Malcolm Turnbull last year.

'What Australians want is they want a fighter,' he told the

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