Latest COVID Order Receives Major Legal Backlash

Biden’s attempt to destroy property rights by eliminating home owners’ ability to evict tenants is not going down without a fight.

The cognitively-deficient president pressured his CDC to extend a pandemic-era eviction moratorium, completely eliminating the rights of property owners, and leading the country down a path of full-blown Communism.

Landlords filed a legal challenge to Joe Biden’s extension of the coronavirus eviction moratorium until October, saying it goes against a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in July.

The Biden administration’s edict should be struck down because the high court clearly said when it allowed the moratorium to be continued it was relying on an assurance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that the agency had no intention of authorizing a further extension, according to a filing late Wednesday in the Atlanta-based federal court of appeals by the Alabama Association of Realtors.

The CDC extended a ban on evictions in areas of the country with substantial and high transmission of Covid-19 on Tuesday, after a firestorm of criticism from Democrats following the lapse of a previous moratorium on Saturday.

In July, the justices rejected calls by landlords and real-estate trade associations from Alabama and Georgia to block the moratorium while their challenge played out in court.

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined the court’s three liberals in the majority. Kavanaugh cast the pivotal vote, saying he was letting the ban stay in effect temporarily even though he thought the CDC had exceeded its power.

The realtors’ association seized on Kavanaugh’s argument that legislative approval is required to further extend the moratorium.

The White House didn’t immediately respond to a message left for comment.

The National Apartment Association has a separate lawsuit pending in Washington to recover damages the organization claims its members suffered as a result of the federal eviction moratorium. The NAA claims that by the end of last year, more than 10 million delinquent tenants owed $57 billion in unpaid rent. Apartment owners are now responsible for $27 billion of debt not covered by federal rental assistance, the group argued in its July complaint.

Author: Elizabeth Tierney


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