https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...pXD?li=BBnb7Kz
                                         
 
   
                                            Nothing unites Congress like the arrival of August, when Democrats  and Republicans collectively curse Washington’s sweltering summer heat  and decamp the city for a monthlong vacation. This year lawmakers will  frolic on the beach while millions of Americans face imminent eviction  after the federal government’s national eviction moratorium expired last  weekend.
     

    © Provided by The Daily Beast  Joshua Roberts/Getty Images   Not all Democrats are so sanguine about the possibility of making as many 
3.6 million peo
ple homeless over the next two months. Missouri Rep. 
Cori Bush slept on the Capitol steps  Sunday night in solidarity with renters facing the boot, but the  party’s biggest names have remained almost totally silent in the face of  an imminent catastrophe.
             
 
Joe Biden’s promised 
“return to normalcy”  increasingly looks like the White House staying to the side as  congressional Democrats duck out of tough and necessary policy fights.  In the case of rent relief, the president did nothing to help advance  legislation after the Supreme Court in June shot down an attempt to end  the eviction freeze in a decision where
 Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who cast the deciding vote, made it clear that Congress would have to act to extend the program.
Unfortunately  for the country, there’s no hope for rent relief—or more ambitious  goals like protecting voting rights—until Biden drafts the Democratic  Party’s heavy-hitters into the fight.
Crafting effective crisis  messaging is one area where Republicans have vaulted past Democrats,  thanks in large part to Donald Trump’s high-stakes, made-for-television  approach to governing. Biden has been naturally skeptical of walking any  path once trod by Trumpist jackboots, and in many cases his caution is  merited. When presidents and political parties use the language of  crisis for cynical political gain, like the GOP’s 
bogus “migrant caravan” hysteria,  it corrodes public trust in institutions and worsens political  polarization. Responsible leaders will avoid those outcomes at all  costs.
But the loss of our national eviction moratorium is not a  manufactured crisis—it is real, and it jeopardizes the financial and  housing security of millions of Americans across all political  viewpoints. That’s because even though rental evictions have expired,  most of the money Congress designated to support rental relief programs  has yet to be spent. In fact, renters have 
only received about 12 percent of the $25 billion  in rent relief Congress authorized back in March. Now Congress is  declaring “Mission Accomplished” with nearly nine of every 10 dollars in  rent support unspent as states, including New York, have failed to give  out this money.
“We’ve known for a month that the eviction moratorium would end Sunday,” New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez 
tweeted. “Congress adjourned for 7 weeks without doing ANYTHING about it… how can we go home when so many are about to lose theirs?”
If only other Democrats were so concerned. Barack Obama, widely regarded as one of the party’s best communicators and 
for the last 12 years  the most respected figure in American life, hasn’t said a word about  the financial cliff facing renters. That’s understandable—the Obama  messaging operation has been busy hyping up the former president’s 
60th birthday bash  at a sprawling mansion on Martha’s Vineyard. At nearly 500 guests, more  senior Democrats will attend Obama’s swanky party than went on  television to condemn Republicans for blocking rent relief.
 
Video: Six million Americans in danger of eviction (MSNBC)
               
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Six million Americans in danger of eviction
      
       
             
   
 
     
       
  
 
    
With 14 percent of U.S. renters 
behind on their payments,  at least a few of the “200-plus staff” working at Obama’s birthday  spectacular will get back from the party just in time to pack up their  apartments.
Ditto for Hillary Clinton, who in her 2016 concession  speech exhorted Americans that “our constitutional democracy demands our  participation.” That fire for participatory action has apparently  faded: Clinton hasn’t mentioned the rental crisis once on social media  or at public events in 2021.
But Obama and Clinton are private citizens, you  may be tempted to rage-tweet. If Democrats want to effectively  transform their policy vision into actual law, they’ll need to get past  the idea that our most effective messengers are exempt from the  all-hands-on-deck effort to repair the damage wrought by Trumpism. The  elite Democrats who correctly framed our national situation as a crisis  during the 2020 campaign are giving activists and voters whiplash now  with the sudden calls for slow, incremental policy changes.
As to  Biden, he did at least ask Congress to extend the eviction moratorium  for a measly 30 days. But when lawmakers balked at the idea of being  held in town during their summer vacation, 
the president let them leave without so much as a press conference slamming such an act of callous selfishness. So much for “the buck stops here.”
“Extending the eviction moratorium is a moral imperative, and one that is simple and necessary,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi 
told fellow lawmakers  last week. But you won’t see any big Oval Office speech from Biden on  the importance of keeping our fellow Americans off the streets. You  won’t hear Obama’s soaring rhetoric about getting through tough times  together. Despite Bidenland’s 
frequent praise for progressive reformer President Franklin D. Roosevelt,  Biden is clearly uncomfortable embracing the big, bombastic, partywide  public persuasion campaigns that made FDR’s tenure such an unstoppable  force.
Instead of organizing a national campaign to galvanize  public opinion and put heat on obstinate Republicans, Democrats have  once again signaled they are unwilling to push for policies that are  critical to their core Black and brown constituencies. What’s worse,  establishment Democrats are squandering critical resources 
attacking progressive primary challengers  like Ohio’s Nina Turner ahead of the 2022 midterm elections. Turner, to  her credit, has been a regular critic of Democratic inaction on rent  relief.
Democrats’ infighting and inaction leaves the media  landscape open for the GOP to portray genuine concerns about rent relief  as mere political posturing. 
If this was a real crisis, the Republican line goes, 
Biden would be treating it like one.
Ocasio-Cortez,  Bush and others in the progressive wing of the Democratic Party  correctly see rent relief as a winning issue for Democrats, one Biden  has inexplicably left to rot while keeping the party’s best  communicators on the bench. With a slow media month ahead, Biden and  congressional Democrats have a golden opportunity to control the media  cycle with a big, public push for protecting American renters. All they  need is the political courage to throw the first punch.
Read more at The Daily Beast.
Odumma and teh PST nomenklatura are out at martha's vineyard cavorting on the beach  - doubtless at taxpayer expense - directly or indirectly - and show how much they care for the Peoples  they have on their Plantations. 
 Thank U - corrupt , criminal DPST nomenkatura!!!!
'rent relief' - is just a DPST play to drive renters into bankruptcy - so nomenklatura can seize their assets through banks - and re-institute higher rents  to gouge the very peoples they claim to 'protect".
It is another blow to the rule of law - which DPST's nomenklatura care nothing about - and have blinded their minions to their purpose - impoverish all America and the World under Communist Chinese Rule!