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中国时间 4:57 2024年11月17日 星期日

双语新闻(2017年2月8日)


川普争议性教育部长人选宣誓就任

美国副总统彭斯主持了教育部长贝齐•德沃斯的宣誓就职仪式。美国国会参议院星期二在彭斯投下打破平衡的一票后,批准了川普总统这位极具争议的教育部长人选。这是美国历史上第一次在审批内阁人选时需要副总统投出的一票。

德沃斯星期二晚上宣誓时说,她将“支持和捍卫美国对抗所有敌人,无论来自国外还是国内”。她在官方誓词中说,她将保证“好好地、忠实地”履行她的职责。

宣誓就职仪式快速完毕,没有喧闹,只有照相机的快门声和其他媒体设备的响声。在短暂的仪式结束后,一小群旁观的家人和朋友发出礼貌的掌声。

星期二早些时候,两名参议院共和党人投票站在了团结一致反对德沃斯任命的民主党人一边,导致支持和反对票数为50-50,副总统彭斯按宪法规定在参议院各执一词时投出了决定性一票。

Trump's Controversial Education Pick Swears In

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence swore in Betsy DeVos as U.S. secretary of education on Tuesday after casting the tie-breaking Senate vote to confirm President Donald Trump's controversial nominee. It was the first time in American history that a vice president had been needed to get a Cabinet pick approved.

DeVos pledged at her swearing-in to "support and defend the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic." In the words of her official vow, she also pledged to "well and faithfully" discharge the duties of her office.

The ceremony took place quickly and without fanfare, except for the whirring and clicking of cameras and other media equipment. After the short ceremony was over, a small audience of family and friends burst into polite applause.

Earlier in the day, two Republicans voted with a united Democratic caucus in opposition to DeVos. The result was a 50-50 split before Pence cast the deciding vote, as the Constitution mandates when the chamber is evenly divided.

美联邦上诉法院本周将对旅行限令作出裁决

美国一个联邦上诉法院本周将就川普政府请求结束暂停旅行限令一案作出裁决。

一个联邦下级法院上个星期颁发了一项临时限制令,规定政府不得对来自7个以穆斯林为主的国家的公民实行90天的入境限令,也不能暂停120天接收难民。

由美国联邦第九巡回上诉法院的三位法官组成的合议庭正在考虑支持还是驳回这项临时限制令,还是能将案件送回下级法院再审。无论他们本周如何裁决,此案都很可能会被送到最高法院。

法官星期二通过电话听取了一位代表华盛顿州和明尼苏达州的律师以及一位来自司法部的律师的陈述。前者认为旅行限令违宪,应该宣布无效;而后者表示总统有权下达这种政令,以保护国家安全。

如果联邦第九巡回法院做出裁决,而不是将案件送回下级法院,那么这一裁决将对最高法院的决定产生很大影响。

自从安东宁·斯卡利亚大法官去年去世之后,美国最高法院一直没有补缺。现在最高法院里有四名偏自由派的法官,四名偏保守派的法官。要想推翻上诉法院的裁决,需要五名最高法院法官的赞同,而目前四比四的局面意味着最高法院可能会支持第九巡回法院做出的任何裁决。

最高法院也可以拒绝受理此案。

目前,旅行限令全面暂停执行,移民支持者一直在鼓励持有美国签证的人尽早登机。旅行限令被暂停后的每一天,准备移民的人都在这样做。

Appeals Court Likely Decides on Trump Travel Ban Case Soon

A U.S. federal appeals court expects to issue a ruling sometime this week on the government's request to end a temporary pause of President Donald Trump's travel ban.

A lower federal court issued the temporary restraining order last week, saying the government could not enforce the 90-day entry ban on people from seven Muslim-majority countries or the 120-day suspension on accepting refugees.

Now the three-judge panel on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is deciding whether to uphold that order, strike it down, or potentially send the case back to the lower court for further consideration. No matter their ruling this week, the case is likely to end up at the Supreme Court.

The judges heard arguments by telephone Tuesday from an attorney representing the states of Washington and Minnesota, which say the travel ban is unconstitutional and should be invalidated, and from a Department of Justice lawyer who said the president has the authority to issue such an executive order and protect national security.

If the 9th Circuit does rule on the case, rather than ordering it back to the lower court, that decision will have big implications for possible action by the Supreme Court.

The nation's highest court has been shorthanded since the death last year of Justice Antonin Scalia, and it is now evenly divided between four liberal-leaning justices and four conservative-leaning ones. It would take the votes of five Supreme Court justices to overturn the appellate court's ruling, meaning a 4-4 tie would let stand whatever the 9th Circuit decides.

The Supreme Court could also decline to hear the case.

For now, enforcement of the order is entirely suspended, and immigration advocates have been encouraging people who have obtained U.S. visas to board airplanes as soon as they can. Each day since the suspension, would-be immigrants have been doing just that.

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