President Joe Biden’s audacious move to assuage liberals by extending a pandemic-related moratorium on evictions puts him in a position he has so far avoided: inviting a high-profile showdown with the Supreme Court
President Joe Biden announced that a revamped version of the eviction ban that expired on July 31 would be re-imposed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a pandemic mitigation measure. | Win McNamee/Getty Images.legal challenge by Alabama and Georgia Realtors' groups
On Tuesday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki insisted that the president felt perfectly comfortable with the legality of the new moratorium. But her comments defied the clear impression Biden had left — an impression he might come to regret. “President Obama, before DACA was implemented, agreed with this underlying premise,” the judge wrote, before quoting Obama’s remarks.
Fallon said that “ideally” Biden would “castigate” the court if it torpedoes the eviction ban, but declined to predict that the president will do so. Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh stands during a group photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, April 23, 2021. | Erin Schaff/The New York Times via AP, PoolIn my view, clear and specific congressional authorization would be necessary for the CDC to extend the moratorium past July 31,” Kavanaugh wrote.
In 1808, President Thomas Jefferson erupted in anger after Justice William Johnson Jr. blocked an export embargo Jefferson imposed as part of a standoff with Great Britain. Jefferson told customs officials to ignore the ruling. They did. Tribe pointed to two changes that could affect the Supreme Court’s take: one in the new policy and another in the state of the pandemic.
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