Labour has held its final press conference of General Election 2016 urging voters not to chose "old wine in new bottles, the new Micheál bottles".
Tánaiste and Labour leader Joan Burton defended her party's time in government.
She said: "I know some people are disappointed with our decisions while in government... we punched above our weight in government."
Labour Minister Brendan Howlin said getting two-thirds of its promises fulfilled, when Labour was not in a majority while in coalition, was a good outcome.
And Ms Burton urged progressive workers considering a vote for a smaller party to think twice.
She said: "I'm not offering some kind of immediate workers' utopia or liberal nirvana but solid sustained progress and reform."
Asked about the possibility of going into government with Fianna Fáil, she said: "That does not attract me at all."
The party again warned of the prospect of a "conservative" Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael government.
Mr Howlin said: "The dogs on the street know that Fianna Fáil will never play second fiddle to Fine Gael."
He added that Labour had delivered on two-thirds of its promises while making up just one third of the government.
He said no party will get 100% of its commitments as all parties will have to negotiate.