Infrastructure victory overshadowed by Biden’s struggles on delta surge
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is struggling with a surge in coronavirus cases, an impending wave of evictions and a spike in consumer prices that have left the White House looking unprepared and threaten to undermine months of more sure-handed work on the pandemic.
Biden surprised Congress on Thursday with a last-minute plea to extend a moratorium on evictions, two days before the ban’s expiration, leaving lawmakers little time to act.
Federal authorities also this week recommended that Americans resume wearing masks in indoor public places to curb the delta variant’s rapid spread — an outbreak telegraphed nearly a month ago when cases began rising in under-vaccinated parts of the South and Midwest. Biden implored vaccine holdouts to get inoculated, even offering them $100 for a shot — and warning federal workers they’d have to wear masks, socially distance and restrict their travel if they refuse.
The moves reinforced the impression that the Biden administration was somehow caught off-guard by delta, after the president had previously won high marks in opinion surveys for his handling of the pandemic.
White House spokesman Andrew Bates said “the country has made enormous strides towards defeating the pandemic thanks to a response that is firmly grounded in facts and science, and which adjusts to the historic challenges the coronavirus poses based on data.”
The sudden eviction chaos, coupled with the pandemic’s comeback and Biden’s response, overshadowed a major achievement earlier in the week when the president sealed a bipartisan deal in the Senate for a $550 billion public works bill, one of his top priorities.
House Democrats hurried Friday to try to assemble votes for a potential extension of the eviction ban, but the effort failed as lobbyists for landlords pressured lawmakers to let the moratorium expire. The chamber is now in recess and won’t return for votes until, possibly, late September.
As the extension foundered, a round of finger-pointing ensued between Democrats at the Capitol and in the White House.
“Really, we only learned about this yesterday. Not really enough time to socialize it within our caucus” and build consensus, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters.
“I quite frankly wish he’d asked us sooner” to extend the eviction moratorium, House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, a Massachusetts Democrat, said Friday. A day earlier, New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a leading progressive, called the White House’s handling of the moratorium’s expiration “reckless and irresponsible.”
A Supreme Court ruling at the end of June had made clear that the moratorium could not be extended beyond July 31 without congressional action.
Biden on Friday evening pressured states and cities to speed up disbursal of emergency rental assistance funds. “Every state and local government must get these funds out to ensure we prevent every eviction we can,” he said in a statement
The White House’s deputy press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said Friday that “we’ve been having conversations with Congress for some time” about extending the eviction ban, in defense of Biden’s 11th-hour request. She declined to be more specific.
Jean-Pierre said in response to OcasioCortez that “I disagree” and that the administration had been working on implementing a $47 billion rental assistance program.
“Just last month we saw $1.5 billion in just one month in rental assistance, which was more than the last five months,” she said. “So we have been working really hard in a whole of government approach that we do here at this White House and this administration and we’ll continue to do that.”
Biden’s stumbles on delta and the eviction moratorium echo the White House’s difficulty responding to rising inflation. The phenomenon, virtually a non-issue in American politics for decades, has bedeviled the president’s economic agenda and given Republicans a line of attack for midterm elections next year.