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MANCHESTER, England,
Oct 8 (Reuters) - Opposition leader David
Cameron, tipped in polls to be Britain’s next prime
minister, promised voters a brighter future with more
control over their lives on Thursday but said they must
first endure the pain of sharp cuts in public spending.
Cameron said that unless quick action was taken to stem
a record government deficit, Britain risked prolonging
the recession and that British authorities needed to
stop printing money to avoid igniting inflation.
Cameron, who turns 43 on Friday, gave a confident
performance in a speech to his party conference seen as
crucial to establishing his credentials to govern
Britain if his Conservative Party is, as expected, to
win an election due by next June.
With his centre-right party consistently ahead of Prime
Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour Party in the polls, he
was careful to avoid the pitfall of looking triumphalist.
He pledged to shrink “big government” he said was to
blame for many of Britain’s problems under Labour,
including a budget deficit forecast to hit 175 billion
pounds ($281 billion) this year.
Some surveys suggest many voters are leaning towards the
Conservatives because they are fed up with Labour after
12 years in power rather than because they back
Conservative policies.
A Sky News/YouGov poll issued before the speech said the
Conservatives’ lead over Labour had shrunk to 9 points
from 14. The Conservatives have taken a gamble by
telling voters this week they would freeze pay for
millions of public sector workers and cut 23 billion
pounds in spending if elected.
“If we win this election, it is going to be tough. There
will have to be cutbacks in public spending, and that
will be painful,” Cameron told the conference hall.
He promised a “steep climb” ahead, but said “the view
from the summit will be worth it”.
Cameron painted his vision of a country where “you
choose the most important things in life — the school
your child goes to and the healthcare you get. I see a
country where communities govern themselves...a great
handing back of power to people.”
Liam Byrne, Labour’s chief secretary to the Treasury,
said Cameron’s speech “concealed the judgement calls he
has consistently got wrong and the real threat of what
he would do.”
Cameron tried to show he understood the problems of
ordinary people, playing down his privileged background
which included attending the elite Eton private school
and Oxford University.
He opened up his personal life to voters, revealing he
questioned his political career after his disabled son
Ivan died in February.
David Lea, western Europe analyst with consultancy
Control Risks, said the Conservatives had not “sealed
the deal” with voters.
“I think they are still very distrusted by the public on
a number of issues. But they remain in pole position
because the Labour Party is simply so unpopular,” he
said.
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