卡梅伦北大演讲稿
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英国首相卡梅伦2023年新年英语演讲稿Ladies and gentlemen,Firstly, I would like to wish you all a very Happy New Year. As we stand here on the brink of 2023, it is a time for reflection and renewal. It is also a time to look ahead to what lies before us and to set our sights on a brighter future for our great nation.Over the past year, we have faced many challenges as a country. The COVID-19 pandemic has tested us in ways we never thought possible. But I am proud to say that we have faced these challenges head-on, with resilience and determination. Our scientists have developed vaccines at an unprecedented pace, our healthcare workers have shown unwavering dedication, and our citizens have come together to support one another in times of need. This is the true spirit of the United Kingdom.But we cannot rest on our laurels. There is still much work to be done. We must continue to fight against the virus, to protect our people and to rebuild our economy. We must invest in our healthcare system, in our education system, and in our infrastructure. We must ensure that no one is left behind as we recover from this crisis. Together, we can build a stronger, fairer society for all.2023 will also be a pivotal year for our country on the international stage. As we forge a new path outside of the European Union, we must seize the opportunities that lie before us. We will negotiate new trade agreements, strengthen our relationships with allies, and promote British values across the globe. We will be a force for good in the world, leading the way in tackling issues such as climate change, poverty, and inequality. This is our chance to show the world what the United Kingdom is made of.But as we look to the future, we must also remember our past. We must honor the countless men and women who have sacrificed so much to make our country what it is today. From the soldiers who have fought for our freedom, to the healthcare workers who have cared for us, to the entrepreneurs who have driven our economy forward, we owe them a debt of gratitude. It is their legacy that we must carry forward into the future.So let us enter 2023 with optimism and determination. Let us come together as one nation, united in purpose and vision. Let us build a brighter future for ourselves and for generations to come. I believe in the strength of the British people, and I know that together, we can achieve greatness.Thank you, and Happy New Year.。
卡梅伦辞职演讲稿鉴赏尊敬的各位议员、各位同事们:很荣幸能站在这里,向大家宣布我辞去英国首相的职务。
这对我来说并不是一个容易的决定,但我认为这是我为国家和党派着想的最佳选择。
我要感谢我的家人、我的团队以及所有支持我的人们,你们一直以来都是我坚强的后盾。
在我担任首相的过去几年里,我们面临了许多挑战和困难。
从英国脱欧的决定开始,到如何实现顺利的脱欧,再到应对全球经济的动荡和恐怖袭击的威胁,我们都经历了许多艰难的时刻。
我感到自豪的是,我们始终坚持着我们的价值观和原则,努力为国家的未来谋求最佳利益。
然而,最近发生的一系列事件使我认识到,我无法继续担任首相的职务。
英国需要一个更有能力的领导者来引领我们走向未来,而我感到我已经无法胜任这个角色。
这不仅是对我的责任和诚实,也是对国家和人民负责的表现。
我对自己的才能和能力有着清晰的认识,我相信有更合适的人来领导我们走向未来。
我相信,只有在能够全身心投入的情况下,我们才能取得更好的成果。
因此,我决定辞去首相的职务,让一个更有能力、更有经验的人来接替我的位置。
我要向我的团队表示衷心的感谢。
他们是我在困难时刻的得力助手,也是我在每一步决策中的重要支持者。
没有他们,我无法完成我在过去几年里所做的工作。
他们是最棒的团队,我为能与他们一起工作感到骄傲。
我要向全体英国人民致以最深的歉意。
我知道我的决定可能会给你们带来不便和困扰,但我相信这是为了国家和人民的未来着想。
我将继续支持我的继任者,希望他能够带领我们走向更加繁荣和稳定的未来。
谢谢大家的支持和理解。
我相信,英国会继续前行,迎接新的挑战。
让我们共同努力,为我们的国家创造更美好的明天。
谢谢大家!。
卡梅伦北大英语演讲导语:以下是卡梅伦的英语演讲稿,希望能够帮助到你。
Twenty five years ago I came to Hong Kong as a student.The year was 1985.Deng Xiaoping and Margaret Thatcher had recently signed the historic Joint Declaration.The remarkable story of the successful handover of Hong Kong and the great progress Hong Kong has continued to make is an example to the world of what can be achieved when two countries cooperate in confidence and with mutual respect.Since then, China has changed almost beyond recognition.China's National Anthem famously calls on the people of China to stand up Qi lai qi lai (stand up, stand up).Today the Chinese people are not just standing up in their own country they are standing up in the world.No longer can people talk about the global economy without including the country that has grown on average ten per cent a year for three decades.No longer can we talk about trade without the country that is now the world's largest exporter and third largest importer and no longer can we debate energy security or climate change without the country that is one of the world's biggest consumers of energy.China is on course to reclaim, later this century, its position as the world's biggest economy the position it has held for 18 of the last 20 centuries. And an achievement of which the Chinese people are justly proud.Put simply: China has re-emerged as a great global power.Threat or opportunityNow people can react to this in one of two ways.They can see China's rise as a threat or they can see it as an opportunity.They can protect their markets from China or open their markets to China.They can try and shut China out or welcome China in, to a new place at the top table of global affairs.There has been a change of Government in Britain and a change of Prime Minister.But on this vital point there is absolute continuity between my government and the Governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.We want a strong relationship with China. Strong on trade. Strong on investment. Strong on dialogue.I made that clear as Leader of the Opposition when I visited Beijing and Chongqing three years ago.And I repeat it as Prime Minister here in China's capital today.In the argument about how to react to the rise of China I say it's an opportunity.I choose engagement not disengagement.Dialogue not stand-off.Mutual benefit, not zero-sum game.Partnership not protectionism.Britain is the country that argues most passionately for globalisation and free trade.Free trade is in our DNA.And we want trade with China. As much of it as we can get.That's why I have with me on this visit one of the biggest and most high-powered delegations a British Prime Minister has ever led to China.Just think about some of the prizes that the rise of China could help to bring within our grasp.Strong, and sustainable growth for the global economy.Vital progress on the Doha trade round which could add US$170 billion to the global economy.A real chance to get back on track towards a legally binding deal on emissions.Unprecedented progress in tackling povertyChina has lifted 500 million people out of poverty in just thirty years.Although there is still a long way to go - that's more people lifted out of poverty than at any time in human history.You can see the results right across this enormous country.When I worked in Hong Kong briefly in 1985, Shenzhen was barely more than a small town, surrounded by paddy fields and waterways.Today it is a city larger than London. It makes most of the world's iPods and one in ten of its mobile phones.And there are other benefits too in tackling the world's most intractable problems.I welcome the fact, for example, that more than 900 Chinese doctors now work in African countries and that in Uganda it is a Chinese pharmaceutical firm that is introducing a new anti-malarial drug.So I want to make the positive case for the world to see China's rise as an opportunity not a threat.But China needs to help us to make that argument to demonstrate that as your economy grows, so do our shared interests, and our shared responsibilities.We share an interest in China's integration into the worldeconomy, which is essential for China's development.If we are to maintain Europe's openness to China, we must be able to show that China is open to Europe.So we share an interest in an international system governed by rules and norms.We share an interest in effective cooperative governance, including for the world economy.We share an interest in fighting protectionism and in a co-ordinated rebalancing between surplus and deficit countries.These interests, those responsibilities are both economic and political.Let me take each in turn.Economic responsibilitiesFirst, economic responsibilities.Let's get straight to the point.The world economy has begun to grow again after the crisis.But that growth is very uneven.Led by China, Asia and other emerging markets are growing quickly.But in much of the advanced world growth is slow and fragile and unemployment stubbornly high.We should not be surprised at this.The crisis has damaged many advanced economies and weakened their financial sectors.They face major structural and fiscal adjustments to rebalance their economies.This is true of my own country.We know what steps we need to take to restore the public finances and rebalance our economy towards greater saving and investment and greater exports.And we have begun to take them.But for the world economy to be able to grow strongly again - and to grow without creating the dangerous economic and financial instabilities that led to the crisis, we need more than just adjustment in the advanced world.The truth is that some countries with current account surpluses have been saving too much while others like mine with deficits have been saving too little.And the result has been a dangerous tidal wave of money going from one side of the globe to the other.We need a more balanced pattern of global demand and supply, a more balanced pattern of global saving and investment.Now sometimes when you hear people talk about economic imbalances, it can seem as though countries that are successful at exporting are being blamed for their success.That's absolutely not the case.We all share an interest and a responsibility to co-operate to secure strong and balanced global growth.There is no greater illustration of this than what happened to China as the western banking system collapsed Chinese exports fell 12 per cent growth dropped to its lowest point in more than a decade and some 20 million jobs were lost in the Chinese export sector.Changes in the structure of our economies will take time.What is important is that the major economies of the world have a shared vision of the path of this change: what actions countries should avoid; what actions countries need to take and, crucially, over what period it should happen.This is why the G20 - and the meeting in Seoul - is so important.Together we can agree a common approach.We can commit to the necessary actions.We can agree that we will hold each other to account.And just as China played a leading role at the G20 in helping to avert a global depression so it can lead now.I know from my discussions with Premier Wen how committed China is to actions to rebalance its economy.China is already talking about moving towards increased domestic consumption better healthcare and welfare more consumer goods as its middle class grows and in time introducing greater market flexibility into its exchange rate.This can not be completed overnight but it must happen.Let's be clear about the risks if it does not about what is at stake for China and for the UK - countries that depend on an open global economy.At the worst point of the crisis, we averted protectionism.But at a time of slow growth and high unemployment in many countries those pressures will rise again already you can see them.Countries will increasingly be tempted to try to maximise their own growth and their own employment, at the expense of others.Globalisation - the force that has been so powerful in driving development and bringing huge numbers into the world economy could go into reverse.If we follow that path we will all lose out.The West would lose for sure. But so too would China.For the last two decades, trade has been a very positive factor in China's re-emergence on the world stage.It has driven amazing growth and raised the living standardsof millions.Trade has helped stitch back China's network of relations with countries across the world.We need to make sure that it does not turn into a negative factor.Just as the West wants greater access to Chinese markets so China wants greater access to Western markets and it wants market economy status in the EU too.I had very constructive talks with Premier Wen on exactly this issue yesterday.I will make the case for China to get market economy status in the EU but China needs to help, by showing that it is committed to becoming more open, as it becomes more prosperous.And we need to work together to do more to protect intellectual property rights because this will give more businesses confidence to come and invest in China.UK companies are uniquely placed to support China's demand for more high value goods for its consumers.Our Pavilion at the World Expo in Shanghai - which won the Gold Award for the best Pavilion design - was a showcase for so many of Britain's strengths from advanced engineering to education from great brands to great pharmaceutical businesses from low carbon to financial services to the creative industries.In all these areas and many more, British companies and British exports can help China deliver the prosperity and progress it seeks.We can be part of China's development strategy, just as China is part of ours.A true partnership of growth.In recent days, Britain has won new business worth billions of pounds involving companies across the UK and cities all over China. including a deal between Rolls Royce and China Eastern Airlines for 16 Airbus 330 aeroengines worth £750 million and inward investments worth in excess of £300 millionThis is all in addition to at least £3bn of business which British companies have secured as part of the Airbus contract concluded with China last week and a further £2 billion of investments by Tesco to develop new shopping malls over the next five years.And with nearly 50 of Britain's most influential culture, education and business leaders joining me on this visit I hope these deals can be just the beginning of a whole new era of bilateral trade between our countries.Achieving this would be a real win-win for our two countries.So if China is prepared to pursue further opening of its markets and to work with Britain and the other G20 countries to rebalance the world economy and take steps over time towards internationalising its currency that will go a long way towards helping the global economy lock in the stability it needs for strong and sustainable growth.And just as importantly, it will go a long way in securing confidence in the global community that China as an economic power is a force for good.Political responsibilitiesBut China does not just have new economic power.It has new political power.And that brings new political responsibilities too.What China says - and what China does - really matters.There is barely a global issue that needs resolution, whichdoes not beg the questions: what does China think, and how can China contribute to a solution?China has attempted to avoid entanglement in global affairs in the past. But China's size and global reach means that this is no longer a realistic choice.Whether its climate change or development, health and education or global security, China is too big and too important now not to play its part.On climate change, an international deal has to be fair.And that means that countries with different histories can't all be expected to contribute in exactly the same way.But a fair deal also means that all countries contribute and all are part of an agreement.And there's actually a huge opportunity here for China.Because China can really profit from having some of the most efficient green energy in the world.On international security, great powers have a bigger interest than anyone in preserving stability.Take development for example, China is one of the fastest growing investors in Africa with a vital influence over whether Africa can become a new source of growth for the world economy.We want to work together to ensure that the money we spend in Africa is not supporting corrupt and intolerant regimes.And the meeting of the UN Security Council which the British Foreign Secretary will chair later this month provides a good opportunity to step up our co-operation on Sudan.As China's star rises again in the world, so does its stake in a stable and ordered world, in which trade flows freely.Today, China is the world's second biggest importer of oil, and Sudan is one of your most important suppliers.So China has a direct national interest in working for stability in Sudan.And four fifths of your oil imports pass through the Malacca Straits.So like Britain and the other big trading nations, you depend on open sea lanes.And like us, your stability and prosperity depends in part on the stability and prosperity of others.Whether its nuclear proliferation, a global economic crisis or the rise of international terrorism, today's threats to our security do not respect geographical boundaries.The proliferation of nuclear material endangers lives in Nanjing as well as New York.China is playing an active role in helping to prevent conflagration over North Korea.We have been working with China in the UN Security Council to keep up the pressure on Iran and China's continuing role here is vital if we are to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.In your own region, I believe China can work with us to improve the situation for the Burmese people.And China is one of the few countries that Burma will listen to on this point.But political responsibilities are not just about how one country interacts with another those responsibilities also apply to the way a country empowers its own people.Political perspectivesIt is undeniable that greater economic freedom has contributed to China's growing economic strength.As China's economy generates higher living standards and more choice for Chinese people, there is inevitably debate withinChina about the relationship between greater economic freedom and greater political freedom.I recognise that we approach these issues with different perspectives. I understand too that being in government is a huge challenge.I'm finding that running a country of 60 million people.So I can only begin to imagine what it is like leading a country of 1.3 billion.I realise this presents challenges of a different order of magnitude.When I came here last I was Britain's Leader of the Opposition.Now we've had a General Election.It produced a Coalition Government, which combines two different political parties - the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats - with different histories and political philosophies, working together for the good of our country.The Labour Party is now the official Opposition, with a constitutional duty to hold the new Government publicly to account.Indeed if I were not in Beijing this Wednesday afternoon, I would be preparing for my weekly session of Prime Minister's questions in the House of Commons, where MPs question me freely about the whole range of government policy.All the time the government is subject to the rule of law.These are constraints on the government, and at times they can be frustrating when the Courts take a view with which the government differs but ultimately we believe that they make our government better and our country stronger.Through the media, the public get to hear directly frompeople who hold different views from the government.That can be difficult at times, too.But we believe that the better informed the British public is about the issues affecting our society the easier it is, ultimately, for the British government to come to sensible decisions and to develop robust policies that command the confidence of our people.I make these observations not because I believe that we have some moral superiority.Our own society is not perfect.There is still injustice which we must work hard to tackle.We are far from immune from poverty and the ills that afflict every nation on earth.But in arguing for a strong relationship between our countries, I want a relationship in which we can be open with each other, in which we can have constructive dialogue of give and take in a spirit of tolerance and mutual respect.The rise in economic freedom in China in recent years has been hugely beneficial to China and to the world.I hope that in time this will lead to a greater political opening because I am convinced that the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together.In some respects it already has.Ordinary Chinese people today have more freedom over where they live what job they do and where they travel than ever before.People blog and text more.It's right to recognise this progress.But it's right also that Britain should be open with China onissues where, no doubt partly because of our different history and culture, we continue to take a different view.There is no secret that we disagree on some issues, especially around human rights.We don't raise these issues to make to us look good, or to flaunt publicly that we have done so.We raise them because the British people expect us to, and because we have sincere and deeply held concerns.And I am pleased that we have agreed the next human rights dialogue between our two governments for January.Because in the end, being able to talk through these issues - however difficult - makes our relationship stronger.ConclusionSo let me finish where I began.China's success - and continued success - is good for Britain and good for the world.It's not in our national interests for China to stumble or for the Chinese economy to suffer a reverse.We have to make the case and I hope China will help us make the case that as China gets richer, it does not follow that the rest of the world will get poorer.It is simply not true that as China rises again in the world, others must necessarily decline.Globalisation is not a zero sum game.If we manage things properly, if we win the arguments for free trade, if we find a way to better regulation, we can both grow together.But if we don't, we will both suffer.I referred earlier to Britain's Pavilion at the Shanghai Expo, "the Dandelion"We are extremely proud that it won a coveted prize, and that it proved so popular with Chinese visitors.It is, in its way, a symbol of the strength and the potential in our relationship.Two different countries, past and future Olympic hosts, on far sides of the world, sowing the seeds of a flourishing relationship in the future, a relationship which has the potential to grow and to bloom.Proof, perhaps, that Confucius was right when he said "within the four seas all men are brothers"Yes, there we will be storms to weather.Yes, there will be perils to overcome.Yes, we will have to persevere.But it will be worth it - for Britain, for China and for the world.[卡梅伦北大英语演讲]。
Tuesday 9 November 2010PM’s speech at Beida University, ChinaA transcript of speech given by the Prime Minister at the Beida University in China on 9 November 2010.Read the transcipt:[Check against delivery]IntroductionTwenty five years ago I came to Hong Kong as a student.The year was 1985.Deng Xiaoping and Margaret Thatcher had recently signed the historic Joint Declaration.The remarkable story of the successful handover of Hong Kongand the great progress Hong Kong has continued to makeis an example to the world of what can be achieved when two countries cooperate in confidence and with mutual respect.Since then, China has changed almost beyond recognition.China’s National Anthem famously calls on the people of China to stand upQi lai qi lai (stand up, stand up)Today the Chinese people are not just standing up in their own countrythey are standing up in the world.No longer can people talk about the global economywithout including the country that has grown on average ten per cent a year for three decades.No longer can we talk about trade…without the country that is now the world’s largest exporter and third largest importerAnd no longer can we debate energy security or climate changewithout the country that is one of the world’s bigge st consumer of energy.China is on course to reclaim, later this century, its position as the world’s biggest economythe position it has held for 18 of the last 20 centuries.and an achievement of which the Chinese people are justly proud.Put simply: China has re-emerged as a great global power.Threat or OpportunityNow people can react to this in one of two ways.They can see China’s rise as a threator they can see it as an opportunity.They can protect their markets from Chinaor open their markets to China.They can try and shut China outor welcome China in, to a new place at the top table of global affairs.There has been a change of Government in Britain and a change of Prime Minister.But on this vital point there is absolute continuity between my government and the Governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.We want a strong relationship with China. Strong on trade. Strong on investment. Strong on dialogue.I made that clear as Leader of the Opposition when I visited Beijing and Chongqing three years ago.And I repeat it as Prime Minister here in China’s capital today.In the argument about how to react to the rise of China.I say it’s an opportunity.I choose engagement not disengagement.Dialogue not stand-off.Mutual benefit, not zero-sum game.Partnership not protectionism.Britain is the country that argues most passionately for globalisation and free trade.Free trade is in our DNA.And we want trade with China. As much of it as we can get.That’s why I have with me on this visit one of the b iggest and mosthigh-powered delegations a British Prime Minister has ever led to China.Just think about some of the prizes that the rise of China could help to bring within our grasp.Strong, and sustainable growth for the global economy.Vital progress on the Doha trade round which could add $170 billion to the global economy.A real chance to get back on track towards a legally binding deal on emissions Unprecedented progress in tackling poverty.China has lifted 500 million people out of poverty in jus t thirty years.Although there is still a long way to go –that’s more people lifted out of poverty than at any time in human history.You can see the results right across this enormous country.When I worked in Hong Kong briefly in 1985, Shenzhen was barely more than a small town, surrounded by paddy fields and waterways.Today it is a city larger than London. It makes most of the world’s iPods and one in ten of its mobile phones.And there are other benefits too in tackling the world’s most intractable problems.I welcome the fact, for example, that more than 900 Chinese doctors now work in African countries and that in Uganda it is a Chinese pharmaceutical firm that is introducing a new anti-malarial drug.So I want to make the positive casefor the wor ld to see China’s rise as an opportunity not a threat.But China needs to help us to make that argumentto demonstrate that as your economy grows, so do our shared interests, and our shared responsibilities.We share an interest in China’s integration into the world economy, which is essential for China’s development.If we are to maintain Europe’s openness to China, we must be able to show that China is open to Europe.So we share an interest in an international system governed by rules and norms.We share an interest in effective cooperative governance, including for the world economy.We share an interest in fighting protectionismand in a co-ordinated rebalancing between surplus and deficit countries.These interests, those responsibilities are both economic and political.Let me take each in turn.Economic ResponsibilitiesFirst, economic responsibilities.Let’s get straight to the point.The world economy has begun to grow again after the crisis.But that growth is very uneven.Led by China, Asia and other emerging markets are growing quickly.But in much of the advanced world growth is slow and fragile and unemployment stubbornly high.We should not be surprised at this.The crisis has damaged many advanced economies and weakened their financial sectors.They face major structural and fiscal adjustments to rebalance their economies.This is true of my own country.We know what steps we need to take to restore the public finances and rebalance our economy towards greater saving and investment and greater exports.And we have begun to take them.But for the world economy to be able to grow strongly again – and to grow without creating the dangerous economic and financial instabilities that led to the crisis, we need more than just adjustment in the advanced world.The truth is that some countries with current account surpluses have been saving too muchwhile others like mine with deficits have been saving too little.And the result has been a dangerous tidal wave of money going from one side of the globe to the other.We need a more balanced pattern of global demand and supply, a more balanced pattern of global saving and investment.Now sometimes when you hear people talk about economic imbalances, it can seem as though countries that are successful at exporting are being blamed for their success.That’s absolutely not the case.We all share an interest and a responsibility to co-operate to secure strong and balanced global growth.There is no greater illustration of this than what happened to China as the western banking system collapsed.Chinese exports fell 12 per centgrowth dropped to its lowest point in more than a decadeand some 20 million jobs were lost in the Chinese export sector.Changes in the structure of our economies will take time.What is important is that the major economies of the world have a shared vis ion of the path of this change: what actions countries should avoid; what actions countries need to take and, crucially, over what period it should happen.This is why the G20 – and the meeting in Seoul – is so important.Together we can agree a common approach.We can commit to the necessary actions.We can agree that we will hold each other to account.And just as China played a leading role at the G20 in helping to avert a global depressionso it can lead now.I know from my discussions with Premier Wen how committed China is to actions to rebalance its economy.China is already talking about moving towards increased domestic consumptionbetter healthcare and welfaremore consumer goods as its middle class growsand in time introducing greater market flexibility into its exchange rate.This can not be completed overnightbut it must happen.Let’s be clear about the risks if it does notabout what is at stake for China and for the UK – countries that depend on an open global economy.At the worst point of the crisis, we averted protectionism.But at a time of slow growth and high unemployment in many countries those pressures will rise againalready you can see them.Countries will increasingly be tempted to try to maximise their own growth and their own employment, at the expense of others.Globalisation – the force that has been so powerful in driving development and bringing huge numbers into the world economy could go into reverse.If we follow that path we will all lose out.The West would lose for sure. But so too would China.For the last two decades, trade has been a very positive factor in China’sre-emergence on the world stage.It has driven amazing growthand raised the living standards of millions.Trade has helped stitch back China’s network of relations with countries across the world.We need to make sure that it does not turn into a negative factor.Just as the West wants greater access to Chinese marketsso China wants greater access to Western marketsand it wants market economy status in the EU too.I had very constructive talks with Premier Wen on exactly this issue yesterday.I will make the case for China to get market economy status in the EUbut China needs to help, by showing that it is committed to becoming more open, as it becomes more prosperous.And we need to work together to do more to protect intellectual property rightsbecause this will give more businesses confidence to come and invest in China.UK companies a re uniquely placed to support China’s demand for more high value goods for its consumers.Our Pavilion at the World Expo in Shanghai – which won the Gold Award for the best Pavilion design –was a showcase for so many of Britain’s strengthsfrom advanced e ngineering to education…from great brands to great pharmaceutical businessesfrom low carbon to financial services to the creative industries.In all these areas and many more, British companies and British exports can help China deliver the prosperity and progress it seeks.We can be part of China’s development strategy, just as China is part of ours.A true partnership of growth.In recent days, Britain has won new business worth billions of poundsinvolving companies across the UK and cities all over Ch ina.including a deal between Rolls Royce and China Eastern Airlines for 16 Airbus 330 aeroengines worth £750 millionand inward investments worth in excess of £300 millionThis is all in addition to at least £3bn of business which British companies have secured as part of the Airbus contract concluded with China last weekand a further £2 billion of investments by Tesco to develop new shopping malls over the next five years.And with nearly 50 of Britain’s most influential culture, education and business leaders joining me on this visit.I hope these deals can be just the beginning of a whole new era of bilateral trade between our countries.Achieving this would be a real win-win for our two countries.So if China is prepared to pursue further opening of its marketsand to work with Britain and the other G20 countries to rebalance the world economy and take steps over time towards internationalising its currencythat will go a long way towards helping the global economy lock in the stability it needs for strong and sustainable growth.And just as importantly, it will go a long way in securing confidence in the global community that China as an economic power is a force for good.Political ResponsibilitiesBut China does not just have new economic power.It has new political power.And that brings new political responsibilities too.What China says – and what China does – really matters.There is barely a global issue that needs resolution, which does not beg the questions: what does China think, and how can China contribute to a solution?China has attempted to avoid entanglement in global affairs in the past. But China’s size and global reach means that this is no longer a realistic choice.Whether it’s climate change or development, health and education or g lobal security, China is too big and too important now not to play its part.On climate change, an international deal has to be fair.And that means that countries with different histories can’t all be expected to contribute in exactly the same way.But a fair deal also means that all countries contributeand all are part of an agreement.And there’s actually a huge opportunity here for China.Because China can really profit from having some of the most efficient green energy in the world.On international security, great powers have a bigger interest than anyone in preserving stability.Take development for example, China is one of the fastest growing investors in Africawith a vital influence over whether Africa can become a new source of growth for the world economy.We want to work together to ensure that the money we spend in Africa is not supporting corrupt and intolerant regimes.And the meeting of the UN Security Council which the British Foreign Secretary will chair later this month provides a good opportunity to step up ourco-operation on Sudan.As China’s star rises again in the world, so does its stake in a stable and ordered world, in which trade flows freely.Today, China is the world’s second biggest importer of oil, and Sudan is one of your most important suppliers.So China has a direct national interest in working for stability in Sudan.And four fifths of your oil imports pass through the Malacca Straits.So like Britain and the other big trading nations, you depend on open sea lanes.And like us, your stability and prosperity depends in part on the stability and prosperity of others.Whether it’s nuclear proliferation, a global economic cris is or the rise of international terrorism, today’s threats to our security do not respect geographical boundaries.The proliferation of nuclear material endangers lives in Nanjing as well as New York.China is playing an active role in helping to prevent conflagration over North Korea.We have been working with China in the UN Security Council to keep up t he pressure on Iranand China’s continuing role here is vital if we are to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.In your own region, I believe China can work with us to improve the situation for the Burmese people.And China is one of the few countries that Burma will listen to on this point.But political responsibilities are not just about how one country interacts with anotherthose responsibilities also apply to the way a country empowers its own people.Political PerspectivesIt is undeniable t hat greater economic freedom has contributed to China’s growing economic strength.As China’s economy generates higher living standards and more choice for Chinese people, there is inevitably debate within China about the relationship between greater economic freedom and greater political freedom.I recognise that we approach these issues with different perspectives. I understand too that being in government is a huge challenge.I’m finding that running a country of 60 million people.So I can only begin to imagine what it is like leading a country of 1.3 billion.I realise this presents challenges of a different order of magnitude.When I came here last I was Britain’s Leader of the Opposition.Now we’ve had a General Election.It produced a Coalition Government, which combines two different political parties – the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats – with different histories and political philosophies, working together for the good of our country.The Labour Party is now the official Opposition, with a constitutional duty to hold the new Government publicly to account.Indeed if I were not in Beijing this Wednesday afternoon, I would be preparing for my weekly session of Prime Minister’s questions in the House of Commons, where MPs question me freely about the whole range of government policy.All the time the government is subject to the rule of law.These are constraints on the government, and at times they can be frustrating when the Courts take a view with which the government differsbut ultimately we believe that they make our government better and our country stronger.Through the media, the public get to hear directly from people who hold different views from the government.That can be difficult at times, too.But we believe that the better informed the British public is about the issues affecting our societythe easier it is, ultimately, for the British government to come to sensible decisions and to develop robust policies that command the confidence of our people.I make these observations not because I believe that we have some moral superiority.Our own society is not perfect.There is still injustice which we must work hard to tackle.We are far from immune from poverty and the ills that afflict every nation on earth.But in arguing for a strong relationship between our countries, I want a relationship in which we can be open with each other, in which we can have constructive dialogue of give and take in a spirit of tolerance and mutual respect.The rise in economic freedom in China in recent years has been hugely beneficial to China and to the world.I hope that in time this will lead to a greater political openingbecause I am convinced that the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together.In some respects it already has.Ordinary Chinese people today have more freedom over where they livewhat job they doand where they travelthan ever before.People blog and text more.It’s right to recognise this progress.But it’s right also tha t Britain should be open with China on issues where, no doubt partly because of our different history and culture, we continue to take a different view.There is no secret that we disagree on some issues, especially around human rights.We don’t raise thes e issues to make to us look good, or to flaunt publicly that we have done so.We raise them because the British people expect us to, and because we have sincere and deeply held concerns.And I am pleased that we have agreed the next human rights dialogue between our two governments for January.Because in the end, being able to talk through these issues –however difficult –makes our relationship stronger.ConclusionSo let me finish where I began.China’s success – and continued success – is good for Britain and good for the world.It’s not in our national interests for China to stumbleor for the Chinese economy to suffer a reverse.We have to make the case.and I hope China will help us make the case.that as China gets richer, it does not follow that the rest of the world will get poorer.It is simply not true that as China rises again in the world, others must necessarily decline.Globalisation is not a zero sum game.If we manage things properly, if we win the arguments for free trade, if we find a way to better regulation, we can both grow together.But if we don’t, we will both suffer.I referred earlier to Britain’s Pavilion at the Shanghai Expo, “the Dandelion”We are extremely proud that it won a coveted prize, and that it proved so popular with Chinese visitors.It is, in its way, a symbol of the strength and the potential in our relationship.Two different countries, past and future Olympic hosts, on far sides of the world, sowing the seeds of a flourishing relationship in the future, a relationship which has the potential to grow and to bloom.Proof, perhaps, that Confucius was right when he said.“within the four seas all men are brothers”Yes, there we will be storms to weather.Yes, there will be perils to overcome.Yes, we will have to persevere.But it will be worth it – for Britain, for China and for the world.。
卡梅伦演讲稿中英文第一篇:卡梅伦演讲稿中英文The country has just taken part in a giant democratic exercise –perhaps the biggest in our history.Over 33 million people –from England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and Gibraltar–have all had their say.这个国家刚刚进行了一场大型的民主活动,这也许是我们历史上最大的一次。
超过3300万来自英格兰、苏格兰、威尔士、北爱尔兰和直布罗陀的人民表达了他们的声音。
We should be proud of the fact that in these islands we trust the people with these big decisions.我们应该为这个事实感到骄傲。
在这片国土上,我们相信这些岛屿上人民做出重大选择。
We not only have a parliamentarydemocracy, but on questions about the arrangements for how we are governed, there are times when it is right to ask the people themselves, and that is what we have done.我们不仅拥有议会民主制度,而且还在如何管理这个国家的问题上,我们也会适时征求人民的意愿。
对此我们已经做到了。
The British people have voted to leave the European Union and their will must be respected.英国人民投票选择离开欧盟,他们的意愿必须得到尊重。
英国首相卡梅伦演讲稿尊敬的各位贵宾,女士们,先生们,大家好!今天,我非常荣幸能够站在这里,向大家分享英国首相卡梅伦的一次重要演讲。
这次演讲发生在2016年,是卡梅伦在英国脱欧公投前夕发表的一次讲话。
在这次演讲中,卡梅伦强调了留在欧盟的重要性,以及脱欧可能带来的不确定性和风险。
他呼吁英国人民认真考虑脱欧的后果,慎重做出选择。
卡梅伦在演讲一开始就提到了英国的繁荣和稳定是建立在与欧盟的紧密合作基础之上的。
他指出,英国在欧盟内部有着重要的地位和影响力,能够参与制定欧盟的政策和规则,从而保护英国的利益。
同时,他也强调了欧盟市场对英国经济的重要性,指出脱欧可能会导致英国失去欧盟市场的便利和优势,对英国经济造成不利影响。
卡梅伦还在演讲中提到了脱欧可能带来的不确定性和风险。
他指出,脱欧后英国将面临重新谈判贸易协定、重新制定法律法规、重新规划移民政策等诸多挑战,这将耗费大量时间和精力,给英国带来政治、经济和社会方面的不稳定。
同时,他也警示脱欧可能导致英国失去欧盟的支持和合作,影响英国在国际事务中的地位和声誉。
最后,卡梅伦呼吁英国人民认真考虑脱欧的后果,慎重做出选择。
他表示,脱欧并非解决英国问题的唯一途径,英国应该通过积极参与欧盟内部改革,争取更好的待遇和更大的发展空间。
他希望英国人民能够团结一致,保持对欧盟的支持,共同创造一个更加繁荣、稳定的未来。
在这次演讲中,卡梅伦以坚定、严谨的语言,清晰地阐述了留在欧盟的重要性,以及脱欧可能带来的不确定性和风险。
他的演讲充分展现了一位领导者的担当和智慧,为英国人民提供了明晰的思路和选择。
希望我们能够从中汲取智慧,共同努力,为实现国家繁荣、人民幸福而奋斗!谢谢大家!。
【唐宁街10号】卡梅伦首相在北京大学的演讲全文信息来源:唐宁街10号,英国首相官方网站原文地址:/news/speeches-and-transcripts/2010/11/pms-sp eech-at-beida-university-china-56820Twenty five years ago I came to Hong Kong as a student. The year was 1985. Deng Xiaoping and Margaret Thatcher had recently signed the historic Joint Declaration. The remarkable story of the successful handover of Hong Kong and the great progress Hong Kong has continued to make is an example to the world of what can be achieved when two countries cooperate in confidence and with mutual respect. Since then, China has changed almost beyond recognition.China’s National Anthem famously calls on the people of China to stand up…Qi lai qi lai (stand up, stand up)Today the Chinese people are not just standing up in their own country. They are standing up in the world. No longer can people talk about the global economy without including the country that has grown on average ten per cent a year for three decades. No longer can we talk about trade without the country that is now the world’s largest exporter and third largest importer. And no longer can we debate energy security or climate change without the country that is one of the world’s bigg est consumers of energy. China is on course to reclaim, later this century, its position as the world’s biggest economy, the position it has held for 18 of the last 20 centuries, and an achievement of which the Chinese people are justly proud. Put simply: China has re-emerged as a great global power.Threat or OpportunityNow people can react to this in one of two ways. They can see China’s rise as a threat or they can see it as an opportunity. They can protect their markets from China or open their markets to China. They can try and shut China out or welcome China in, to a new place at the top table of global affairs. There has been a change of Government in Britain and a change of Prime Minister. But on this vital point there is absolute continuity between my government and the Governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.We want a strong relationship with China. Strong on trade. Strong on investment. Strong on dialogue.I made that clear as Leader of the Opposition when I visited Beijing and Chongqing three years ago.And I repeat it as Prime Minister here in China’s capital today.In the argument about how to react to the rise of China, I say it’s an opportunity.I choose engagement not disengagement. Dialogues not stand-off. Mutual benefit, not zero-sum game. Partnership not protectionism.Britain is the country that argues most passionately for globalization and free trade. Free trade is in our DNA. And we want trade with China as much of it as we can get. That’s why I have with me on this visit one of the biggest and most high-powered delegations a British Prime Minister has ever led to China. Just think about some of the prizes that the rise of China could help to bring within our grasp. Strong, and sustainable growth for the global economy. Vital progress on the Doha trade round which could add $170 billion to the global economy. A real chance to get back on track towards a legally binding deal on emissions. Unprecedented progress in tackling poverty.China has lifted 500 million people out of poverty in just thirty years. Although there is still a long way to go –that’s more people lifted out of poverty than at any time in human history. You can see the results right across this enormous country.When I worked in Hong Kong briefly in 1985, Shenzhen was barely more than a small town, surrounded by paddy fields and waterways. Today it is a city larger than London. It makes most of the world’s iPods and one in ten of its mobile phones.And there are other benefits too in tackling the world’s most intractable problems. I welcome the fact, for example, that more than 900 Chinese doctors now work in African countries and that in Uganda it is a Chinese pharmaceutical firm that is introducing a new anti-malarial drug. So I want to make the positive case for the wo rld to see China’s rise as an opportunity not a threat. But China needs to help us to make that argument to demonstrate that as your economy grows, so do our shared interests, and our shared responsibilities. We share an interest in China’s integration int o the world economy, which is essential for China’s development. If we are to maintain Europe’s openness to China, we must be able to show that China is open to Europe. So we share an interest in an international system governed by rules and norms. We share an interest in effective cooperative governance, including for the world economy. We share an interest in fighting protectionism and in a co-ordinate rebalancing between surplus and deficit countries. These interests, those responsibilities are both economic and political.Let me take each in turn.Economic ResponsibilitiesFirst, economic responsibilities.Let’s get straight to the point.The world economy has begun to grow again after the crisis. But that growth is very uneven. Led by China, Asia and other emerging markets are growing quickly. But in much of the advanced world growth is slow and fragile and unemployment stubbornly high. We should not be surprised at this. The crisis has damaged many advanced economies and weakened their financial sectors. They face major structural and fiscal adjustments to rebalance their economies. This is true of my own country. We know what steps we need to take to restore the public finances and rebalance our economy towards greater saving and investment and greater exports. And we have begun to take them. But for the world economy to be able to grow strongly again – and to grow without creating the dangerous economic and financial instabilities that led to the crisis, we need more than just adjustment in the advanced world.The truth is that some countries with current account surpluses have been saving too much while others like mine with deficits have been saving too little. And the result has been a dangerous tidal wave of money going from one side of the globe to the other. We need a more balanced pattern of global demand and supply, a more balanced pattern of global saving and investment.Now sometimes when you hear people talk about economic imbalances, it can seem as though countries that are successful at exporting are being blamed for their success. That’s absolutely not the case. We all share an interest and a responsibility to co-operate to secure strong and balanced global growth. There is no greater illustration of this than what happened to China as the western banking system collapsed. Chinese exports fell 12 per cent. Growth dropped to its lowest point in more than a decade and some 20 million jobs were lost in the Chinese export sector. Changes in the structure of our economies will take time.What is important is that the major economies of the world have a shared vision of the path of this change: what actions countries should avoid; what actions countries need to take and, crucially, over what period it should happen. This is why the G20 – and the meeting in Seoul – is soimportant. Together we can agree a common approach. We can commit to the necessary actions. We can agree that we will hold each other to account. And just as China played a leading role at the G20 in helping to avert a global depression, so it can lead now.I know from my discussions with Premier Wen how committed China is to actions to rebalance its economy.China is already talking about moving towards increased domestic consumption, better healthcare and welfare, more consumer goods as its middle class grows, and in time introducing greater market flexibility into its exchange rate. This cannot be completed overnight, but it must happen.Let’s be clear about the risks if it does not, about what is at stake for China and for the UK – countries that depend on an open global economy. At the worst point of the crisis, we averted protectionism. But at a time of slow growth and high unemployment in many countries those pressures will rise again, already you can see them. Countries will increasingly be tempted to try to maximise their own growth and their own employment, at the expense of others.Globalization – the force that has been so powerful in driving development and bringing huge numbers into the world economy could go into reverse. If we follow that path we will all lose out. The West would lose for sure. But so too would China. For the last two decades, trade has been a very positive factor in China’s re-emergence on the world stage. It has driven amazing growth and raised the living standards of millions. Trade has helped stitch back China’s network of relations with countries across the world. We need to make sure that it does not turn into a negative factor. Just as the West wants greater access to Chinese markets, so China wants greater access to Western markets, and it wants market economy status in the EU too.I had very constructive talks with Premier Wen on exactly this issue yesterday.I will make the case for China to get market economy status in the EU, but China needs to help, by showing that it is committed to becoming more open, as it becomes more prosperous. And we need to work together to do more to protect intellectual property rights, because this will give more businesses confidence to come and invest in China.UK companies are uniquely placed to support China’s demand for more high value goods for its consumers. Our Pavilion at the World Expo in Shanghai –which won the Gold Award for the best Pavilion design – was a showcase for so many of Britain’s s trengths from advanced engineering to education, from great brands to great pharmaceutical businesses, from low carbon to financial services to the creative industries. In all these areas and many more, British companies and British exports can help China deliver the prosperity and progress it seeks. We can be part of China’s development strategy, just as China is part of ours.A true partnership of growth, in recent days, Britain has won new business worth billions of pounds involving companies across the UK and cities all overChina. Including a deal between Rolls Royce and China Eastern Airlines for 16 Airbus 330 aero engines worth £750 million, and inward investments worth in excess of £300 millionThis is all in addition to at least £3bn of business which British companies have secured as part of the Airbus contract concluded with China last week,and a further £2 billion of investments by Tesco to develop new shopping malls over the next five years.And with nearly 50 of Britain’s most influential cultur e, education and business leaders joining me on this visit. I hope these deals can be just the beginning of a whole new era of bilateral trade between our countries. Achieving this would be a real win-win for our two countries. So if China is prepared to pursue further opening of its markets and to work with Britain and the other G20 countries to rebalance the world economy and take steps over time towards internationalising its currency that will go a long way towards helping the global economy lock in the stability it needs for strong and sustainable growth.And just as importantly, it will go a long way in securing confidence in the global community that China as an economic power is a force for good. Political ResponsibilitiesBut China does not just have new economic power. It has new political power. And that brings new political responsibilities too. What China says – and what China does – really matters. There is barely a global issue that needs resolution, which does not beg the questions: what does China think, and how can China contribute to a solution? China has attempted to avoid entanglement in global affairs in the past. But China’s size and global reach means that this is no longer a realistic choice. Whether it’s climate change or development, health and education or global security, China is too big and too important now not to play its part.On climate change, an international deal has to be fair. And that means that countries with different histories can’t all be expected to contribute in exactly the same way. But a fair deal also means that all countries contribute and all are part of an agreement. And there’s actually a huge opportunity here for China. Because China can really profit from having some of the most efficient green energy in the world. On international security, great powers have a bigger interest than anyone in preserving stability.Take development for example, China is one of the fastest growing investors in Africa with a vital influence over whether Africa can become a new source of growth for the world economy. We want to work together to ensure that the money we spend in Africa is not supporting corrupt and intolerant regimes.And the meeting of the UN Security Council which the British Foreign Secretary will chair later this month provides a good opportunity to step up our co-operation on Sudan. As China’s star rises again in the world, so does its stake in a stable and ordered world, in which trade flows freely.Today, China is the world’s second biggest importer of oil, and Sudan is one of your most important suppliers. So China has a direct national interest in working for stability in Sudan. And four fifths of your oil imports pass through the Malacca Straits. So like Britain and the other big trading nations, you depend on open sea lanes. And like us, your stability and prosperity depends in part on the stability and prosperity of others. Whether it’s nuclear proliferation, a global economic crisis or the rise of international terrorism, today’s threats to our security do not respect geographical boundaries. The proliferation of nuclear material endangers lives in Nanjing as well as New York.China is playing an active role in helping to prevent conflagration over North Korea. We have been working with China in the UN Security Council to keep up the pressure on Iran, and China’s continuing role here is vital if we are to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. In your own region, I believe China can work with us to improve the situation for the Burmese people. And China is one of the few countries that Burma will listen to on this point. But political responsibilities are not just about how one country interacts with another, those responsibilities also apply to the way a country empowers its own people.Political PerspectivesIt is undeniable that greater economic freedom has contributed to China’s growing economic strength. As China’s economy generates higher living standards and more choice for Chinese people, there is inevitably debate within China about the relationship between greater economic freedom and greater political freedom. I recognise that we approach these issues with different perspectives. I understand too that being in government is a huge challenge. I’m finding that running a country of 60 million people. So I can only begin to imagine what it is like leading a country of 1.3 billion. I realise this presents challenges of a different order of magnitude. When I came here last I was Britain’s Leader of the Opposition.Now we’ve had a General Election. It produced a Coalition Government, which combines two different political parties – the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats – with different histories and political philosophies, working together for the good of our country. The Labour Party is now the official Opposition, with a constitutional duty to hold the new Government publicly to account.Indeed if I were not in Beijing this Wednesday afternoon, I would be preparing for my weekly session of Prime Minister’s questions in the House of Commons, where MPs question me freely about the whole range of government policy. All the time the government is subject to the rule of law. These are constraints on the government, and at times they can be frustrating when the Courts take a view with which the government differs, but ultimately we believe that they make our government better and our country stronger. Through the media, the public get to hear directly from people who hold different views from the government. That can be difficult at times, too. But we believe that the better informed the British public is about the issues affecting our society, the easier it is, ultimately, for the British government to come to sensible decisions and to develop robust policies that command the confidence of our people.I make these observations not because I believe that we have some moral superiority. Our own society is not perfect. There is still injustice which we must work hard to tackle. We are far from immune from poverty and the ills that afflict every nation on earth. But in arguing for a strong relationship between our countries, I want a relationship in which we can be open with each other, in which we can have constructive dialogue of give and take in a spirit of tolerance and mutual respect. The rise in economic freedom in China in recent years has been hugely beneficial to China and to the world. I hope that in time this will lead to a greater political opening because I am convinced that the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together. In some respects it already has. Ordinary Chinese people today have more freedom over where they live, what job they do, and where they travel than ever before. People blog and text more. It’s right to recognise this progress. But it’s right also that Britain should be open with China on issues where, no doubt partly because of our different history and culture, we continue to take a different view. There is no secret that we disagree on some issues, especially around human rights. We don’t raise these issues to make to us look good, or to flaunt publicly that we have done so. We raise them because the British people expect us to, and because we have sincere and deeply held concerns. And I am pleased that we have agreed the next human rights dialogue between our two governments for January. Because in the end, being able to talk through these issues –however difficult – makes our relationship stronger.ConclusionSo let me finish where I began. China’s success – and continued success – is good for Britain and good for the world. It’s not in our national interests for China to stumble or for the Chinese economy to suffer a reverse. We have to make the case .and I hope China will help us make the case that as China gets richer, it does not follow that the rest of the world will get poorer.It is simply not true that as China rises again in the world, others must necessarily decline. Globalisation is not a zero sum game. If we manage things properly, if we win the arguments for free trade, if we find a way to better regulation, we can both grow together. But if we don’t, we will both suffer.I referred earlier to Britain’s Pavilion at the Shanghai Expo, “the Dandelion” We are extremely proud that it won a coveted prize, and that it proved so popular with Chinese visitors. It is, in its way, a symbol of the strength and the potential in our relationship. Two different countries, past and future Olympic hosts, on far sides of the world, sowing the seeds of a flourishing relationship in the future, a relationship which has the potential to grow and to bloom. Proof, perhaps, that Confucius was right when he said“within the four seas all men are brothers”Yes, there we will be storms to weather.Yes, there will be perils to overcome.Yes, we will have to persevere.But it will be worth it – for Britain, for China and for the world.。
Visiting British Prime Minister David Cameron delivers a speech and answers questions from students in Peking University in Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 10, 2010. (Xinhua/XieHuanchi)到访的英国首相卡梅伦在北京大学发表了演讲并回答了同学们的提问。
Visiting British Prime Minister David Cameron Wednesday called for a "stronger relationship" with China, saying the rise of the nation is an opportunity to other countries.到访的英国首相卡梅伦周三呼吁与中国建立更加牢固的关系,说一个国家的崛起对其他国家来说也是一次机会。
"We want a stronger relationship with China. Stronger on trade, investment and dialogue," said Cameron while delivering a speech in Peking University.“我们想与中国在贸易,投资和对话方面建立更加牢固的关系,”卡梅伦在北京大学发表演讲时说道。
While stressing the importance of trade, he said the great thing about the bilateral relationship is that it is not just confined to economic interaction.在强调贸易的重要性的同时,他还说双边关系重要的方面不仅仅局限在经济方面。
英国首相卡梅伦就职演讲篇一:英国首相卡梅伦演讲稿英国新首相戴维卡梅伦就职演说,全文如下:HERmaJESTYthequeenhasaskedmetoformanewgovernmentandihaveacce pted。
Beforeitalkaboutthatnewgovernment,letmesaysomethingabouttheonethath paredwithadecadeago,thiscountryismoreopenathomeand morecompassionateabroad,andthatissomethingweshouldallbegratefulfor。
onbehalfofthewholecountryi'dliketopaytributetotheoutgoingprimemi nister,forhislongrecordofdedicatedpublicservice。
intermsofthefuture,ourcountryhasahungparliamentwherenopartyhasanove rallmajorityandwehavesomedeepandpressingproblems–ahugedeficit,deepsocialproblemsandapoliticalsysteminneedofreform。
Forthosereasons,iaimtoformaproperandfullcoalitionbetweentheconservati vesandtheLiberaldemocrats.ibelievethatistherightwaytoprovidethiscountr ywiththestrong,thestable,thegoodanddecentgovernmentthatithinkweneeds obadly。
卡梅伦英语演讲稿篇一:卡梅伦的演讲稿(英文)Rt Hon David Cameron, Tuesday, May 11 XXHer Majesty The Queen has asked me to form a new Government and I have accepted.Before I talk about that new Government, let me say something about the one that has just passed.Compared with a decade ago this country is more open at home, and more compassionate abroad and that is something we should all be grateful for and on behalf of the whole country I'd like to pay tribute to the outgoing Prime Minister for his long record of dedicated public service.In terms of the future, our country has a hung Parliament where no party has an overall majority and we have some deep and pressing problems, a huge deficit, deep social problems and a political system in need of reform. For those reasons, I aim to form a proper and full coalition between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats. I believe that is the right way toprovide this country with the strong, the stable, the good and decent Government that I think we need so badly.Nick Clegg and I are both political leaders who want to put aside party differences and work hard for the common good and for the national interest. I believe that is the best way to get the strong Government that we need, decisive Government that we need today.I came in to politics because I love this country.I think its best days still lie ahead and I believe deeply in public service. And I think the service our country needs right now is to face up to our really big challenges, to confront our problems, to take difficult decisions, to lead people through those difficult decisions so that together we can reach better times ahead.One of the tasks that we clearly have is to rebuild trust in our political system. Yes that's about cleaning up expenses, yes that's about reforming Parliament and yes it's about making sure people are con, in control and that the politicians are alwaystheir servants and never their masters.But I believe it's also something else. It's about being honest about what Government can achieve. Real change is not what Government can do on its own. Real change is when everyone pulls together, comes together, works together when we all exercise our responsibilities to ourselves, to our families, to our communities and to others. And I want to help try and build a more responsible society here in Britain, one where we don't just ask what are my entitlements, but what are my responsibilities. When we don't ask where what am I just owed, but more what can I give. And a guide for that society that those who can should and those who can't we will always help.I want to make sure that my Government always looks after the elderly, the frail, the poorest in our country. We must take everyone through us on some of the difficult decisions that we have ahead. Above all it will be a Government that is built on some clear values, values of freedom, values of fairness and values of responsibility. I want us to build an economy thatrewards work. I want us to build a society with stronger families and stronger communities and I want a political system that people can trust and look up to once again.This is going to be hard and difficult work. A coalition will throw up all sorts of challenges, but I believe together we can provide that strong and stable Government that our country needs based on those values, rebuilding family, rebuilding community, above all rebuilding responsibility in our country.Those are the things I care about; those are the things that this Government will now start work on doing.Thank you very much.篇二:卡梅伦演讲稿中文版我要感谢你们在这整个运动中所展现的热忱,我要感谢你们给予苏格兰保守党的指引。
卡梅伦北大演讲稿上次来这里时,我是英国反对党领导人。
后来我们有了大选,它产生了保守党和自民党联合政府……工党现在成了反对党,其宪法职责是公开问责新政=府。
事实上,在今天这个周三下午,要不是我在北京的话,就得准备每周的下院首相质询,议员们可以就所有**政策向我任意发问。
英国政-府永远从属于法治,这些是对政=府的制约。
有时它会让人沮丧,但我们认为,这最终会使我们的政=府更好,国家更强。
通过媒体,公众可直接听到与政=府相左的意见,这有时可能很麻烦,但公众对影响我们社=会的问题越了解,最终政=府就越容易作出理智决定,制定出赢得民心的有力政策。
我在英国当首相都没有专门的厨师为我做饭,只能去内阁蹭饭。
不仅如此,每年收入全部公开。
每周两周还要去下院接受质询,基本回来满脸都口水。
我要是进了老百姓家,抱着老百姓哭。
第二天泰晤士报的标题会是英国首相以无耻的眼泪换取选票。
而太阳报的标题则会是英国首相和私生子相认。
tuesday 9 november XXpm’s speech at beida university, chinaa transcript of speech given by the prime minister at the beida university in china on 9 november XX.read the transcipt:[check against delivery]introductiontwenty five years ago i came to hong kong as a student.the year was 1985.deng xiaoping and margaret thatcher had recently signed the historic joint declaration.the remarkable story of the successful handover of hong kongand the great progress hong kong has continued to makeis an example to the world of what can be achieved when two countries cooperate in confidence and with mutual respect.since then, china has changed almost beyond recognition.china’s national anthem famously calls on the people of china to stand upqi lai qi lai (stand up, stand up)today the chinese people are not just standing up in their own countrythey are standing up in the world.no longer can people talk about the global economywithout including the country that has grown on average ten per cent a year for three decades.no longer can we talk about trade…without the country that is now the world’s larg est exporter and third largest importerand no longer can we debate energy security or climate changewithout the country that is one of the world’s biggest consumer of energy.china is on course to reclaim, later this century, its position as the world’s biggest economythe position it has held for 18 of the last 20 centuries.and an achievement of which the chinese people are justly proud.put simply: china has re-emerged as a great global power.threat or opportunitynow people can react to this in one of two ways.they can see china’s rise as a threator they can see it as an opportunity.they can protect their markets from chinaor open their markets to china.they can try and shut china outor welcome china in, to a new place at the top table of global affairs.there has been a change of government in britain and a change of prime minister.but on this vital point there is absolute continuity between my government and the governments of tony blair and gordon brown.we want a strong relationship with china. strong on trade. strong on investment. strong on dialogue.i made that clear as leader of the opposition when i visited beijing and chongqing three years ago.and i repeat it as prime minister here in china’s capital today.in the argument about how to react to the rise of china.i say it’s an opportunity.i choose engagement not disengagement.dialogue not stand-off.mutual benefit, not zero-sum game.partnership not protectionism.britain is the country that argues most passionately forglobalisation and free trade.free trade is in our dna.and we want trade with china. as much of it as we can get.that’s why i have with me on this visit one of the biggest and most high-powered delegations a british prime minister has ever led to china.just think about some of the prizes that the rise of china could help to bring within our grasp.strong, and sustainable growth for the global economy.vital progress on the doha trade round which could add $170 billionto the global economy.a real chance to get back on track towards a legally binding deal on emissionsunprecedented progress in tackling poverty.china has lifted 500 million people out of poverty in just thirty years.although there is still a long way to go –that’s more peoplelifted out of poverty than at any time in human history.you can see the results right across this enormous country.when i worked in hong kong briefly in 1985, shenzhen was barely more than a small town, surrounded by paddy fields and waterways.today it is a city larger than l ondon. it makes most of the world’s ipods and one in ten of its mobile phones.and there are other benefits too in tackling the world’s most intractable problems.i welcome the fact, for example, that more than 900 chinese doctors now work in african countries and that in uganda it is a chinese pharmaceutical firm that is introducing a new anti-malarial drug.so i want to make the positive casefor the world to see china’s rise as an opportunity not a threat.but china needs to help us to make that argumentto demonstrate that as your economy grows, so do our shared interests, and our shared responsibilities.we share an interest in china’s integration into the world economy, which is essential for china’s development.if we are to maintain europe’s openne ss to china, we must be able to show that china is open to europe.so we share an interest in an international system governed by rulesand norms.we share an interest in effective cooperative governance, including for the world economy.we share an interest in fighting protectionismand in a co-ordinated rebalancing between surplus and deficit countries.these interests, those responsibilities are both economic and political.let me take each in turn.economic responsibilitiesfirst, economic responsibilities.let’s get straight to the point.the world economy has begun to grow again after the crisis.but that growth is very uneven.led by china, asia and other emerging markets are growing quickly. but in much of the advanced world growth is slow and fragile and unemployment stubbornly high.we should not be surprised at this.the crisis has damaged many advanced economies and weakened their financial sectors.they face major structural and fiscal adjustments to rebalance their economies.this is true of my own country.we know what steps we need to take to restore the public finances and rebalance our economy towards greater saving and investment and greater exports.and we have begun to take them.but for the world economy to be able to grow strongly again – and to grow without creating the dangerous economic and financialinstabilities that led to the crisis, we need more than justadjustment in the advanced world.the truth is that some countries with current account surpluses have been saving too muchwhile others like mine with deficits have been saving too little.and the result has been a dangerous tidal wave of money going from one side of the globe to the other.we need a more balanced pattern of global demand and supply, a more balanced pattern of global saving and investment.now sometimes when you hear people talk about economic imbalances, it can seem as though countries that are successful at exporting are being blamed for their success.that’s absolutely not the case.we all share an interest and a responsibility to co-operate to secure strong and balanced global growth.there is no greater illustration of this than what happened to china as the western banking system collapsed.chinese exports fell 12 per centgrowth dropped to its lowest point in more than a decadeand some 20 million jobs were lost in the chinese export sector. changes in the structure of our economies will take time.what is important is that the major economies of the world have a shared vision of the path of this change: what actions countries should avoid; what actions countries need to take and, crucially, over what period it should happen.this is why the g20 – and the meeting in seoul – is so important. together we can agree a common approach.we can commit to the necessary actions.we can agree that we will hold each other to account.and just as china played a leading role at the g20 in helping to avert a global depressionso it can lead now.i know from my discussions with premier wen how committed china is to actions to rebalance its economy.china is already talking about moving towards increased domestic consumptionbetter healthcare and welfaremore consumer goods as its middle class growsand in time introducing greater market flexibility into its exchange rate.this can not be completed overnightbut it must happen.let’s be clear about the risks if it does notabout what is at stake for china and for the uk – countries that depend on an open global economy.at the worst point of the crisis, we averted protectionism.but at a time of slow growth and high unemployment in many countries those pressures will rise againalready you can see them.countries will increasingly be tempted to try to maximise their own growth and their own employment, at the expense of others. globalisation – the force that has been so powerful in driving development and bringing huge numbers into the world economy could go into reverse.if we follow that path we will all lose out.the west would lose for sure. but so too would china.for the last two decades, trade has been a very positive factor in china’s re-emergence on the world stage.it has driven amazing growthand raised the living standards of millions.trade has helped stitch back china’s network of relations with countries across the world.we need to make sure that it does not turn into a negative factor. just as the west wants greater access to chinese marketsso china wants greater access to western marketsand it wants market economy status in the eu too.i had very constructive talks with premier wen on exactly this issue yesterday.i will make the case for china to get market economy status in the eu but china needs to help, by showing that it is committed to becoming more open, as it becomes more prosperous.and we need to work together to do more to protect intellectual property rightsbecause this will give more businesses confidence to come and invest in china.uk companies are uniquely placed to support china’s demand for more high value goods for its consumers.our pavilion at the world expo in shanghai – which won the gold award for the best pavilion design – was a showcase for so many of britain’s strengthsfrom advanced engineering to education…from great brands to great pharmaceutical businessesfrom low carbon to financial services to the creative industries.in all these areas and many more, british companies and british exports can help china deliver the prosperity and progress it seeks. we can be part of china’s development strategy, just as china is part of ours.a true partnership of growth.in recent days, britain has won new business worth billions of pounds involving companies across the uk and cities all over china.including a deal between rolls royce and china eastern airlines for 16 airbus 330 aeroengines wo rth £750 millionand inward investments worth in excess of £300 millionthis is all in addition to at least £3bn of business which british companies have secured as part of the airbus contract concluded with china last weekand a further £2 billion of inv estments by tesco to develop new shopping malls over the next five years.and with nearly 50 of britain’s most influential culture, education and business leaders joining me on this visit.i hope these deals can be just the beginning of a whole new era of bilateral trade between our countries.achieving this would be a real win-win for our two countries.so if china is prepared to pursue further opening of its marketsand to work with britain and the other g20 countries to rebalance the world economy and take steps over time towards internationalising its currencythat will go a long way towards helping the global economy lock in the stability it needs for strong and sustainable growth.and just as importantly, it will go a long way in securing confidence in the global community that china as an economic power is a forcefor good.political responsibilitiesbut china does not just have new economic power.it has new political power.and that brings new political responsibilities too.what china says – and what china does – really matters.there is barely a global issue that needs resolution, which does not beg the questions: what does china think, and how can chinacontribute to a solution?china has attempted to avoid entanglement in global affairs in the pas t. but china’s size and global reach means that this is no longer a realistic choice.whether it’s climate change or development, health and education or global security, china is too big and too important now not to play its part.on climate change, an international deal has to be fair.and that means that countries with different histories can’t all be expected to contribute in exactly the same way.but a fair deal also means that all countries contributeand all are part of an agreement.and there’s act ually a huge opportunity here for china.because china can really profit from having some of the mostefficient green energy in the world.on international security, great powers have a bigger interest than anyone in preserving stability.take development for example, china is one of the fastest growing investors in africawith a vital influence over whether africa can become a new source of growth for the world economy.we want to work together to ensure that the money we spend in africa is not supporting corrupt and intolerant regimes.and the meeting of the un security council which the british foreign secretary will chair later this month provides a good opportunity to step up our co-operation on sudan.as china’s star rises again in the world, so does i ts stake in a stable and ordered world, in which trade flows freely.today, china is the world’s second biggest importer of oil, and sudan is one of your most important suppliers.so china has a direct national interest in working for stability insudan.and four fifths of your oil imports pass through the malacca straits. so like britain and the other big trading nations, you depend on open sea lanes.and like us, your stability and prosperity depends in part on the stability and prosperity of others.whe ther it’s nuclear proliferation, a global economic crisis or the rise of international terrorism, today’s threats to our security do not respect geographical boundaries.the proliferation of nuclear material endangers lives in nanjing as well as new york.china is playing an active role in helping to prevent conflagration over north korea.we have been working with china in the un security council to keep up the pressure on iranand china’s continuing role here is vital if we are to prevent iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.in your own region, i believe china can work with us to improve the situation for the burmese people.and china is one of the few countries that burma will listen to on this point.but political responsibilities are not just about how one country interacts with anotherthose responsibilities also apply to the way a country empowers its own people.political perspectivesit is undeniable that greater economic freedom has contributed to china’s growing economic strength.as china’s econo my generates higher living standards and more choice for chinese people, there is inevitably debate within china about therelationship between greater economic freedom and greater political freedom.i recognise that we approach these issues with different perspectives.i understand too that being in government is a huge challenge.i’m finding that running a country of 60 million people.so i can only begin to imagine what it is like leading a country of1.3 billion.i realise this presents challenges of a different order of magnitude. when i came here last i was britain’s leader of the opposition.now we’ve had a general election.it produced a coalition government, which combines two different political parties – the conservatives and the liberal democrats –with different histories and political philosophies, working together for the good of our country.the labour party is now the official opposition, with aconstitutional duty to hold the new government publicly to account. indeed if i were not in beijing this wednesday afternoon, i would be preparing for my weekly session of prime minister’s questions in the house of commons, where mps question me freely about the whole rangeof government policy.all the time the government is subject to the rule of law.these are constraints on the government, and at times they can be frustrating when the courts take a view with which the government differsbut ultimately we believe that they make our government better andour country stronger.through the media, the public get to hear directly from people who hold different views from the government.that can be difficult at times, too.but we believe that the better informed the british public is aboutthe issues affecting our societythe easier it is, ultimately, for the british government to come to sensible decisions and to develop robust policies that command the confidence of our people.i make these observations not because i believe that we have some moral superiority.our own society is not perfect.there is still injustice which we must work hard to tackle.we are far from immune from poverty and the ills that afflict every nation on earth.but in arguing for a strong relationship between our countries, i want a relationship in which we can be open with each other, in which we can have constructive dialogue of give and take in a spirit of tolerance and mutual respect.the rise in economic freedom in china in recent years has been hugely beneficial to china and to the world.i hope that in time this will lead to a greater political opening because i am convinced that the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together.in some respects it already has.ordinary chinese people today have more freedom over where they live what job they doand where they travelthan ever before.people blog and text more.it’s right to recognise this progress.but it’s right also that britain should be open with china on issues where, no doubt partly because of our different history and culture, we continue to take a different view.there is no secret that we disagree on some issues, especially around human rights.we don’t raise these issues to make to us look good, or to flaunt publicly that we have done so.we raise them because the british people expect us to, and because we have sincere and deeply held concerns.and i am pleased that we have agreed the next human rights dialogue between our two governments for january.because in the end, being able to talk through these issues –however difficult – makes our relationship stronger.conclusionso let me finish where i began.china’s success – and continued success – is good for britain and good for the world.it’s not in our national interests for china to stumbleor for the chinese economy to suffer a reverse.we have to make the case.and i hope china will help us make the case.that as china gets richer, it does not follow that the rest of the world will get poorer.it is simply not true that as china rises again in the world, others must necessarily decline.globalisation is not a zero sum game.if we manage things properly, if we win the arguments for free trade, if we find a way to better regulation, we can both grow together.but if we don’t, we will both suffer.i referr ed earlier to britain’s pavilion at the shanghai expo, “the dandelion”we are extremely proud that it won a coveted prize, and that it proved so popular with chinese visitors.it is, in its way, a symbol of the strength and the potential in our relationship.two different countries, past and future olympic hosts, on far sides of the world, sowing the seeds of a flourishing relationship in the future, a relationship which has the potential to grow and to bloom. proof, perhaps, that confucius was right when he said.“within the four seas all men are brothers”yes, there we will be storms to weather.yes, there will be perils to overcome.yes, we will have to persevere.but it will be worth it – for britain, for china and for the world.。