6月28日VOA聽力:英國脫歐或影響美國大選成果
Brexit’s surprise victory left the Obamaadministration scrambling to put the best face onan outcome it didn’t want. One country has made adecision. Obviously, it was a decision the UnitedStates had hoped would go the other way. But itdidn’t. And so we begin with a fundamental respectfor voters. But Republican presidential candidateDonald Trump appeared to welcome the outcome, speaking in Scotland one day after theBrexit referendum. People want to take their country back. They want to have independence,in a sense... I really do see a parallel between what’s happening in the United States andwhat’s happening here. People want to see borders. Democratic presumptive nominee HillaryClinton’s campaign pounced on Trump’s assertion that British monetary turmoil mightbenefit his Scottish business venture. Every president is tested by world events. But DonaldTrump thinks about how his golf resort can profit from them. But if the Brexit vote illuminatedpublic discontent on one side of the Atlantic, Republicans said similar sentiments exist on theother side, as well. What you saw in England, at least from what I read, is that people got tiredof being dictated to by unelected bureaucrats in Brussels. And of course we have a lot of thathere in this country. A lot of the president’s bureaucrats expanding regulations in a way thatslows our economy and makes it difficult to have growth. A new poll shows Clinton leadingTrump by 12 points, but most voters want a new direction for America. Democrats insisted theelectorate is not blinded by unease and discontent. The differences between Secretary Clintonand Donald Trump in terms of temperament, in terms of judgment, in terms of values couldn’tbe more stark. And they are on display once again over the last two weeks. A trans-Atlanticshockwave rattling a lackluster U.S. economic recovery could be a wild card in the election.The Obama administration is stressing the need to minimize disruptions stemming fromBrexit.
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