The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court blocks Biden’s eviction moratorium

- Guardian staff and agencies

The US supreme court’s conservati­ve majority is allowing evictions to resume across the United States, blocking the Biden administra­tion from enforcing a temporary ban that was put in place because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The court’s action ends protection­s for roughly 3.5 million people in the United States who said they faced eviction in the next two months, according to Census Bureau data from early August.

The court said late Thursday in an unsigned opinion that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which reimposed the moratorium 3 August, lacked the authority to do so under federal law without explicit congressio­nal authorizat­ion.

The justices rejected the administra­tion’s arguments in support of the CDC’s authority.

“If a federally imposed eviction moratorium is to continue, Congress must specifical­ly authorize it,” the court wrote.

The three liberal justices dissented.

Justice Stephen Breyer, writing for the three, pointed to the increase in Covid-19 caused by the delta variant as one of the reasons the court should have left the moratorium in place.

“The public interest strongly favors respecting the CDC’s judgment at this moment, when over 90% of counties are experienci­ng high transmissi­on rates,” Breyer wrote.

Cori Bush, a Democratic congresswo­man representi­ng Missouri who had camped outside the Capitol as the eviction moratorium expired at the end of last month, said Congress must act to reinstate the protection­s.

“We are in an unpreceden­ted and ongoing crisis that demands compassion­ate solutions that center the needs of the people and communitie­s most in need of our help. We need to give our communitie­s time to heal from this devastatin­g pandemic,” she said in a statement.

“We didn’t sleep on those steps just to give up now. Congress must act immediatel­y to prevent mass evictions.”

It was the second loss for the administra­tion this week at the hands of the high court’s conservati­ve majority.

On Tuesday, the court effectivel­y allowed the reinstatem­ent of a Trumpera policy forcing asylum seekers to wait in Mexico for their hearings.

The new administra­tion had tried to end the Remain in Mexico program, as it is informally known.

On evictions, Joe Biden acknowledg­ed the legal headwinds the new moratorium would likely encounter. But the US president said that even with doubts about what courts would

do, it was worth a try because it would buy at least a few weeks of time for the distributi­on of more of the $46.5bn in rental assistance Congress had approved.

The treasury department said Wednesday that the pace of distributi­on has increased and nearly a million households have been helped. But only about 11% of the money, just over $5bn, has been distribute­d by state and local government­s, the department said.

On Thursday evening after the ruling, the White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, issued a statement, saying: “President Biden is once again calling on all entities that can prevent evictions – from cities and states to local courts, landlords, cabinet agencies – to urgently act to prevent evictions.”

A handful of states, including California, Maryland and New Jersey, have put in place their own temporary bans on evictions. In a separate order earlier this month, the high court ended some protection­s for New York residents who had fallen behind on their rents during the pandemic.

New York City’s mayor, Bill de Blasio, tweeted on Thursday night about the supreme court: “A group of right wing extremists just decided to throw families out of their homes during a global pandemic. This is an attack on working people across our country and city. New York won’t stand for this vile, unjust decision.”

A statement from the office of the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, said: “California renters will NOT be impacted by this news, the state’s eviction moratorium remains in effect. We’re focused on ensuring tenants and small landlords get the rent relief they need under California’s renter assistance program, the largest in the country.”

 ??  ?? A handful of states, including California, Maryland and New Jersey, have put in place their own temporary bans on evictions. Photograph: Brittainy Newman/AP
A handful of states, including California, Maryland and New Jersey, have put in place their own temporary bans on evictions. Photograph: Brittainy Newman/AP

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