Unless there is a dramatic shift in opinion in the final days of the campaign the country is heading for a period of political instability after the general election.
The final Irish Times/Ipsos MRBI poll of the campaign, conducted on Friday and Saturday, showed little change for the Government parties since the first poll of the campaign.
On the basis of the figures Fine Gael and Labour will fall far short of the 80 seats needed to form a majority government.
They will also be well short of the number they require to put together a stable administration backed by Independents.
Fianna Fáil has gained support since the campaign began and has closed the gap with Fine Gael to five points, but it is hard to see how the party can win the number of seats required to lead a government.
The only way this could come about would be if Fianna Fáil, Sinn Féin and a majority of Independents combined to form a coalition but, given the wide range of views across the Independents and smaller parties, it is hard to see this happening.
In any case Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin has been unequivocal about not going into coalition with Sinn Féin, and if his party does well he will be in a position to impose his will on the elements in the party who do not share his views.
Unstoppable march
The apparently unstoppable march of the Independents and smaller parties is the standout feature of the poll.
At 28 per cent nationally, the category is level with Fine Gael and in Dublin they far outstrip every other party with an astonishing 41 per cent of the vote.
This 41 per cent breaks down into a number of categories, with pure Independents on 9 per cent in the capital, closely followed by the Social Democrats and the AAA/PBP on 7 per cent each, Shane Ross’s Independent Alliance on 6 per cent, the Greens on 4 per cent, Renua on 3 per cent, and other groupings on 3 per cent. A final 3 per cent are not sure which of the Independent categories they support.
The poll indicates that the election counts in all the Dublin constituencies could provide unexpected results if the Independents and smaller parties transfer to each other in any significant fashion.
The Independent brand is not as strong outside Dublin but they still poll a significant share of the vote right across the country.
The disparate nature of the Independent/Others vote could be a lifeline for Fine Gael as a very broken field could allow the candidates of the main government party to stay in the race as various Independents go out.
In Dublin, Fine Gael is in second place, well behind Independents/Others, on 22 per cent. The party gets 26 per cent in Connacht/ Ulster, 30 per cent in the rest of Leinster and 33 per cent in Munster.
Fine Gael’s strongest support is among middle-class AB and C1 voters, where it gets 35 per cent and 33 per cent respectively. It drops back among C2 and DE categories but jumps to almost 50 per cent among farmers.
The party also has a reasonable spread across the age categories, peaking at 37 per cent among the over-65s and dropping off significantly among those aged under 34.
Labour struggling
The news for Labour is grim on all fronts. Its national level of support, at 6 per cent, is about a third of what it won at the last election and almost all of its seats are in danger.
The party does best in Dublin where it is on 9 per cent. Its next best region is Munster where it hits 6 per cent, but it is at only 4 per cent in the rest of Leinster and Connacht/Ulster.
In class terms, Labour is strongest among the AB group but struggling among the other social categories.
The poll is very good news for Fianna Fáil, with the party making gains at precisely the right moment. It can now have serious hopes of emulating its local election performance when it hit 25 per cent of the national vote.
What will encourage the party is that it has extended its lead over Sinn Féin to eight points with the election finish line in sight.
However, one point of concern for Fianna Fáil is that its vote in Dublin remains at just 13 per cent. The party has no seats in the capital at present and, on that share of votes, will be lucky to win a handful.
Strong in Leinster
In the rest of the country the picture is better. Fianna Fáil’s strongest region is the rest of Leinster where at 31 per cent it is marginally ahead of Fine Gael.
It is the same story in Connacht/ Ulster, but in Munster the party is well behind Fine Gael.
In class terms Fianna Fáil is strongest among the least well off C2 and DE categories and weakest among the better off.
In age terms it has pulled ahead of Fine Gael among the under-34s but is behind among the older age groups, particularly the over-65s.
It seems Micheál Martin’s positioning of Fianna Fáil as a slightly left-wing party has gained traction with poorer and younger voters and that has helped it eat into the Sinn Féin vote.
Support for Sinn Féin has dropped back significantly to 15 per cent with the party’s vote in Dublin under pressure from the rise of AAA/PBP as well as Fianna Fáil, while in Munster it has dropped back in tandem with the rise of Independents.
Sinn Féin is now on 14 per cent in Dublin and Munster and 17 per cent in the rest of Leinster and Connacht/ Ulster.
The Sinn Féin vote is massively concentrated among the poorest C2 and DE social categories and among people aged under 34.