Chief Minister Katy Gallagher and her political rival Zed Seselja are using the final day of the ACT election campaign to sell their messages to the territory's undecided voters.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
Ms Gallagher and Canberra Liberals Leader Mr Seselja kicked off the day speaking to voters in southern Canberra.
Both leaders, backed by teams of supporters, said they were not "wasting any time" in the final 24 hours before polls open tomorrow.
Ms Gallagher spent the morning letterboxing in Duffy with her deputy, Andrew Barr, Attorney General Simon Corbell and a team of candidates and staffers.
"For us, nothing's changed, we're out there selling our message, we'll continue to do that right till the polling booths shut tomorrow afternoon," she said.
"We take nothing for granted, we never have.
"We've gone in with a view about what we need to do in this town for the next four years, we think that's the right thing to do and hopefully tomorrow we'll be able to secure the support of the Canberra community to deliver that vision"
Ms Gallagher said she was in "a permanent state of nervousness" despite opinion polls giving her a two to one lead over Mr Seselja as preferred Chief Minister.
The Chief Minister will campaign across the city today and in Canberra's north and will finish in the southern electorate of Brindabella this afternoon.
"I'm simply not letting myself think about tomorrow night, we've still got two full days ahead of us," she said.
"What we're hearing on the street is that people will listen to good government, good ideas for the future."
Mr Seselja said his focus would be talking to voters his home electorate of Brindabella today, but with shorter appearances in the other electorates.
"My team will be all over Canberra," he said.
"I'm proud of what my team has done, I'm proud of what Brendan and the team have done as MLAs, what all of the candidates have done, I think they've put a very good pitch to the community.
"They've connected and I'm very confident the community will respond very strongly to that."
Mr Seselja, who said it would be "arrogant" to say he wasn't nervous ahead of tomorrow's poll, said the party's final pitch to voters today was "don't trust Labor for another four years".
"Don't give them the opportunity to tax your household out of existence," he said.
"Don't reward them for the failures in services, particularly in health and particularly in local services where they haven't done a good job over the last 11 years."