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Britain’s Cameron pledges immigration clampdown in Queen’s Speech

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Britain's Queen Elizabeth II leaves Buckingham Palace in central London ahead of the State Opening of Parliament on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged a fresh clampdown on immigration in the Queen’s Speech on Wednesday, seeking to bolster his right-wing credentials and counter the rise of the UK Independence Party (UKIP).

Measures to restrict migrants’ access to healthcare and tackle illegal immigration form a central part of the speech, which sets out the British government’s legislative priorities for the year.

The speech, written by coalition ministers and read out by Queen Elizabeth II in the House of Lords at a ceremony full of pageantry and historical symbolism, was drawn up before UKIP won a quarter of the vote in local elections last week.

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But it reflects growing concern among Cameron’s Conservatives and other major political parties about UKIP, which is capturing the populist vote with its strong anti-immigration, Eurosceptic message.

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“Our resolve to turn our country around has never been stronger,” Cameron and his Liberal Democrat Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said in a foreword to the speech.

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