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However, Cameron said the impact of the debt crisis in the eurozone, high oil prices and an economy laden with debt meant his administration could not risk more borrowing. "There can be no going back on our carefully judged strategy for restoring the public finances," Cameron planned to say. Clegg said the global economic crisis had been "like a giant heart attack," but acknowledged that the recovery was proving to be painful. "Ducking the tough choices would only prolong the pain, condemning the next generation to decades of higher interest rates, poorer public services and fewer jobs," Clegg planned to say, according to a text of his speech. On Wednesday, Cameron's government will set out its annual legislative program in a speech by Queen Elizabeth II, as she opens a new session of Parliament in a traditionally opulent ceremony. Grass-roots members of Cameron's party have urged him to focus on boosting economic growth and to sideline plans to introduce same-sex marriage
-- an extension of civil partnership rights for gay couples -- and to reform Britain's unelected upper chamber, the House of Lords.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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