Pelosi and other senior Democrats showed no signs of relenting in their calls for Biden to reverse course. The White House announced last Thursday that it was letting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s eviction moratorium expire Saturday because of concerns that it would be struck down in court without Congress passing new legislation. Pelosi tried and failed to muster votes for a House bill last week as more than a dozen Democrats revolted. Landlords lobbied against the moratorium because they said it cost them billions of dollars each month.
Pelosi, who with her leadership team has asked Biden to extend the ban through Oct. 18, received support Monday from the Congressional Black Caucus, which warned that thousands of Black families and children could lose their homes as Covid-19 surges.
CBC Chair Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) said in a statement that the group had been in touch with the White House and House leadership throughout the last 48 hours to figure out a way to extend the moratorium.
“The virus is still a threat, and the moratorium must be extended, and the funds Congress allocated to assist renters and landlords must be spent,” Beatty said. “An extension of the moratorium is based on public health and the Delta variant. It will also give more time to allow the money that Congress allocated to finally flow.”
Some Democrats said they were wary of a further extension.
“We need a long-term solution, and look, here’s the challenge: If you extend the moratorium, what happens is people’s back-due debt grows larger and larger and larger,” Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) said Monday morning on MSNBC. “And so I know some want to extend the moratorium through the end of the year. OK, then their debts will be higher and what, we’ll have them be evicted in January?”
Kaine added: “What I’m focused on is a big investment in rental relief.”
The deadlock in Washington left some state and local officials rushing to avert a wave of evictions. A judge for Georgia’s DeKalb County ordered a 60-day countywide eviction moratorium to fill the void after the nationwide ban lapsed.
Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, meanwhile, sought to reassure the public that his administration had a handle on the situation in the state.
“We do have one of the more robust eviction diversion programs in the country, which we’ve been running since last fall when the state’s eviction moratorium expired,” Baker said at a press conference Monday. “That made it possible for us to take a lot of the federal assets that have been made available through federal legislation and literally just put it toward that particular program.”
“I think we’re pretty well-positioned to make sure we help people deal with some of these issues and consequences,” he added.
Lisa Kashinsky contributed to this report.
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