Neither David Cameron nor his rival Ed Miliband landed a knockout blow during the first TV contest of Britain's election race, experts said Friday, as the centre-left opposition prepared to launch its campaign.
Firing the gun on the race ahead of May 7's tight election, Prime Minister Cameron of the centre-right Conservatives and Miliband of Labour separately faced questions from an interviewer and the public during a 90-minute show late yesterday.
A Guardian/ICM snap poll after the programme indicated that 54 per cent of viewers gave Cameron victory compared to 46 percent for Miliband.
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"Under interrogation from Mr Paxman, Mr Cameron gave a rather defensive performance," The Times newspaper said in its editorial. "There was one obvious winner last night: Jeremy Paxman."
In the Guardian, Matthew d'Ancona said Cameron looked "in real trouble" early in the Paxman interview but "stopped behaving like a Vogon (alien) and replied with ease" to audience questions.
Miliband's answers to Paxman's questions were more combative -- when asked if he was up to the job of prime minister, he responded: "Hell yes, I'm tough enough".
Gaby Hinsliff in the Guardian called his performance "surprisingly punk" but said the snap poll suggested viewers had already made their minds up before the show, watched by just under three million people live on Channel 4 and Sky News.
The Conservatives and Labour are neck-and-neck in opinion polls on 34 percent, according to an average calculated by the UK Polling Report website.
Both parties were hoping the TV debates would break the stalemate and see their leader edge ahead as the election campaign got under way in earnest after the end of parliamentary business Thursday.
Today, Miliband is set formally to start Labour's election campaign, while Cameron is campaigning in London.