Yes. At some point, once recovery is really solidly under way, then all of the attention should go back to prioritizing some reduction in public debt.
The extent to which active measures may be needed to bring that down will depend on the speed of recovery. If you have a sufficiently strong economic recovery and tax revenues come back rapidly, it might be that your deficits reach levels at which you're going to get reductions in the debt burden without having to make stringent cuts to public spending and so on.
This is all really going to become more transparent in the next year or so, I'd say.