ED Miliband has underlined the neck and neck state of the referendum race by urging all Labour members to speak to 100 voters before polling day.

Speaking at a rally in Glasgow, he said Quebec's independence referendum in 1995 was decided by 50,000 votes - and suggested next week's poll could be even tighter.

Addressing an audience of 400 Labour members, he told them: "The people in this room could be enough to turn this referendum if you each speak to 100 people between now and Thursday.

"The next few days are about all of us making the argument but it is all about you. It is up to all of us to talk to friends, family, neighbours, people in our streets."

The Labour leader was joined by former Prime Minister Gordon Brown - the first time they have shared a stage in the campaign - and Johann Lamont, the Scots party chief, for a "get the vote out" rally at the Royal Concert Hall.

Before they spoke, Jermain Jackman, the winner of BBC television talent show The Voice and a Labour Party member, won rapturous applause after singing the line "You're the best nation".

Mr Miliband called on party members to campaign hard after an ICM poll gave the No campaign a narrow two point lead going into the final week of campaigning.

Repeating a key message to Labour supporters, nearly one-third of whom are planning to vote Yes in the referendum according to the latest poll, he called for solidarity across the UK.

Earlier, Mr Brown launched a scathing attack on First Minister Alex Salmond's economic plans, saying they would not create social justice in an independent Scotland. Dismissing the SNP's claim to be a left-of-centre social democratic party, he said: "They have dined out on that for too long, but you have got to look at their actual policies."