U.S. lawmaker spends night outside Capitol to protest return of
evictions
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[August 02, 2021]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Representative
Cori Bush, who was evicted three times and lived in her car with her two
children before her career in politics, spent a sleepless night on the
U.S. Capitol steps to protest the end on Saturday of a pandemic freeze
on evictions.
Bush, a progressive Democrat who won her Missouri seat last year,
managed about an hour of sleep sitting upright on a camp chair. Two
other progressive lawmakers -- Representatives Ilhan Omar and Ayanna
Pressley -- showed up to support her.
Bush remained outside the Capitol on Saturday afternoon urging an
Instagram audience to join her demand that Congress, President Joe Biden
or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stop the moratorium
from expiring .
"Today, by midnight, if nothing happens, if no other action is taken
from the House, or the Senate or the administration, 7 million people
will be at risk for evictions," the Black congresswoman said. "I've been
there myself."
People are at risk of eviction because of unpaid rent that accrued
during the pandemic, when many lost jobs due to the economic fallout.
The CDC imposed the moratorium 11 months ago in part to prevent the
spread of the coronavirus through crowding in shelters and homes of
people who would take in others.
The House of Representatives adjourned for a seven-week August recess on
Friday without renewing the moratorium after a Republican congressman
blocked a motion to extend it until Oct. 18. Lacking sufficient support,
including among some Democrats, House Democrats opted not to bring
legislation to a vote.
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U.S. Representative Cori Bush, who was evicted three times and lived
in her car with her two children before her career in politics,
spent a sleepless night on the U.S. Capitol steps to protest the end
on Saturday of a pandemic freeze on evictions.
Biden on Thursday had asked Congress to extend the
moratorium and made clear that his administration would not extend
it again without congressional approval.
More than 6.5 million U.S. households are currently behind on $20
billion in rental payments, according to a study by the Aspen
Institute and the COVID-19 Eviction Defense Project.
Opponents of extending the moratorium note the mounting pressure on
landlords who have had to keep up with mortgage, insurance and tax
payments without rent coming in.
Bush said she had long expected the CDC would extend the moratorium.
She now hoped to get enough other lawmakers to help her convince
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to bring the House back into session and
act.
"We need to buy some time so that we can talk to moderate Democrats
and ... see how we can work together to get this done," she told
reporters.
She had not heard from Pelosi, who told reporters Friday that she
believed the CDC could extend the moratorium.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone and Cynthia
Osterman)
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