时间:2019-01-02 作者:英语课 分类:2017年VOA慢速英语(六)月


英语课

 


People living in the American territory of Puerto Rico have voted to become a U.S. state. However, the vote does not have the force of law.


Only 23 percent of Puerto Rican voters took part in the referendum.


Of those who did vote, about 500,000 chose statehood. About 7,500 chose independence and 6,700 voted to remain a territory.


People who live on the Caribbean island are U.S. citizens, but they cannot vote in presidential elections. They have one congressional representative to the United States Congress who has limited voting rights.


The island also has its own legislature with a Senate and a House of Representatives.


The territory’s governor Ricardo Rossello said of the vote, “In any democracy, the expressed will of the majority that participates in the electoral process always prevails.”


Sunday’s vote on the issue of statehood was the fifth of its kind.


People on the island also voted in 2012 to seek statehood.


Puerto Rico struggles with its financial problems


The vote took place as Puerto Rico seeks protection from its creditors who hold its large public debt.


Peter Hakim is a former president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a policy research group on the Americas. He said the vote is not too meaningful because of low participation.


He says competing political parties on the island have called for something other than statehood.


The Popular Democratic Party wants Puerto Rico to remain a territory while the Puerto Rican Independence Party wants the island to become a separate country.


Hakim says the vote takes place as the island faces a serious crisis.


“Puerto Rico’s in the midst of a severe economic and, in many respects, social crisis with large-scale emigration toward the United States.”


He says poor supervision of the Puerto Rican economy and government is partly to blame for its economic situation.


He says the island’s current status is in, what he calls, the “undefined zone” in which it is neither a state nor a country.


“My guess in the end (is) that Puerto Rico would probably be better off if it did become a state.”


Puerto Ricans do not pay federal income tax so the territory does not receive as much federal money as states do. But, the people do pay Social Security and some other U.S. taxes. This causes some people to believe that the island would be better off as a state.


However, Puerto Rico’s debt crisis continues to harm its economic growth and ties to the U.S. The economy has been in recession for more than 10 years.


Puerto Rico says it cannot pay back its more than $70 billion debt. The territory also owes its retirement payment plan, or pension, about $50 billion dollars.


Last month, Governor Rosello refused to agree to measures demanded by creditors to make payments on the island’s bonds. That started a process for Puerto Rico to seek legal protection from its creditors through a form of bankruptcy. However, the territory is barred from the kind of legal bankruptcy that U.S. cities and towns can seek.


It is unclear how long Puerto Rico’s debt negotiations will take.


Words in This Story


referendum – n. an event in which the people of a county, state, etc., vote for or against a law that deals with a specific issue : a public vote on a particular issue


emigration – n. to leave a country to live somewhere else


participate – v. to be involved with others in doing something: to take part in an activity or event with others


prevail – v. to defeat an opponent especially in a long or difficult contest


midst – n. the period of time when something is happening or being done


status – n. the official position of a person or thing according to the law


zone – n. an area that is different from other areas in a particular way


bonds – n. debt securities in which creditors agree to provide money to a company or government in exchange for regular interest payments and full repayment after a set amount of time



标签: VOA慢速英语
学英语单词
a hard dose to swallow
academy board
acanthiza
adequacy
adjustment of figure
agonic intussusception
air-vapor temperature
ampli
anisocyloplegia
anthraconecrosis
anti-realist
antimilitarisms
antisepticizing
asbs
b-girls
break-even dollar sales
Caret symbol
CHAENOPSIDAE
coagulation factors
cocksheads
control current
counter-current condenser
critical materials
cyclotron harmonic wave
darluca filum (biv.) cast
Dearden
deltamax
diablos
Dimet wire
direct excitation
divisional application
double-pass condenser
electronic interface unit
end of data marker
end-october
epoxy coal tar varnish
equation of law and regulation
facing ring
Febrite
fibre extent
flap rail
forces station
franchised
get off the track
glass globe
Hall element
herstorian
hlderlin
hydrogutta-percha
ingorge
interturn short circuit test
junction field-effect transistor (jfet)
lendings at sight
Lepontine, Alps
light ray pointer galvanometer
magicful
mesopleura
microsession
minor scale
modelprototype comparison test
modern domestic industry
Montrevault
motor ataxia
Mudimbi
museumless
mutinist
noncentrality
nonethanol
nursery web spiders
Nutaysh, Wādī
oar up!
office-walls
palaemon macrodactylus
photosensitizer
physiogeny
picrotoxins
possessionists
Postau
print direction
qualified name
reel adjustment cylinder
rim requirements
rip channel
Salix humilis
side-blown basic Bessemer steel
slip tectonite
sollidly
SS-12
stabilator
stick in the mire
syrupus citri
tank mileage
tenyear
this and that
tiltoramas
trabalhista
trafficking in
upshot heater
versi-
week day
witness summons
zero oscillation