Friday, August 14, 2020

Tens Of Millions Face Prospect Of Evictions During Pandemic



https://www.risingupwithsonali.com/2020/08/12/tens-of-millions-face-prospect-of-evictions-during-pandemic/





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- August 12, 2020
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FEATURING ZACHARY NEUMANN – President Trump’s executive order that was meant to extend a federal eviction moratorium due to the Covid-19 pandemic, actually does very little. While Trump claimed it would, “solve that problem largely, hopefully completely,” others have said it will do nothing to help the tens of millions of Americans who are on the precipice of homelessness.

Unemployment is widespread and with relief payments expiring and rent payments due the US appears to be on the brink of a massive and housing crisis unprecedented in the modern era.

Zach Neumann, Founder of the Covid-19 Eviction Defense Project, , lawyer whose practice focuses on landlord-tenant, debt collection, and wage dispute cases. He is also a public policy lecturer at CU Denver’s School of Public Affairs and writes about jobs and economic issues at the Aspen Institute.

Trump Admits He is Sabotaging the Post Office

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dnZmJU1agE


If You're a Blue-Collar Worker, Trump is Not Your Friend







https://portside.org/2020-08-12/if-youre-blue-collar-worker-trump-not-your-friend

Portside Date: August 12, 2020
Author: Steven Greenhouse
Date of source: August 12, 2020
CNN



)It has long been confounding that President Donald Trump's strongest supporters are Whites with only a high school education. This is bewildering because the Trump administration has repeatedly and systematically hurt America's blue-collar workers and favored corporations over them.



Steven Greenhouse

Although Trump ran in 2016 as a champion of the working class, he has undermined them again and again. His administration has adopted no enforceable rules whatsoever to protect these workers from the spread of Covid-19, not for factories, construction sites, warehouses or any other places where his most loyal followers are at risk of getting sick and dying.

Trump is pushing hard to kill the Affordable Care Act, which has made health coverage available and affordable to millions of working Americans, including those with pre-existing conditions.

Trump has made it easier for Wall Street firms to take advantage of workers when handling the hard-earned money in their 401(k)'s by scrapping the "fiduciary rule" that required the firms to act in the best interest of workers, rather than in the firms' best interests.

The administration has joined Senate Republicans in pushing to take away workers' right to sue an employer if they contract Covid-19 on the job.

So if a meat-packing plant, auto plant, steel mill, coal mine, construction site, trucking depot or big box store fails to do enough to protect its employees from Covid-19 -- tough luck, under this proposal they would not be able to sue.

Trump replaced an Obama-era rule that had extended overtime protections to millions more workers with a far narrower rule, meaning that millions of blue-collar Americans will no longer qualify for overtime pay.

Nor has Trump done anything to lift the minimum wage, a basic step that would not only help lift many low-wage workers out of poverty, but also lift the wages for millions of blue-collar workerswho make more than the minimum.

During the 2016 campaign, Trump vowed to spend $1 trillion to improve the nation's decaying roads, bridges and airports. His nebulous infrastructure plan was supposed to create hundreds of thousands of good-paying middle-class jobs, especially for construction workers. But Trump has not gotten to square one on infrastructure. Could it be due to Trump's 2017 tax cuts that tilted in favor of rich Americans and corporations?

Trump's Council of Economic Advisors promised that those tax cuts would raise the income of average families by $4,000 a year. They didn't.

Trump has appointed federal judges who have systematically favored corporate America over workers.

His Supreme Court appointee, Neil Gorsuch, provided the deciding vote to let corporations prohibit workers from bringing class actions to sue their companies, for instance, for cheating workers on overtime or not paying government-required wages on construction projects. That ruling relegates aggrieved workers to individual, behind closed doors arbitrations, which greatly favor companies over workers.

Trump's administration and judicial appointees have worked aggressively to weaken labor unions, the one institution that does most to speak for workers and increase their pay. Under Trump, the National Labor Relations Board has taken many steps to make it harder for workers -- whether Uber drivers, retail workers, or McDonald's workers -- to unionize.

Whether or not you like unions, there's no denying that when unions are stronger in the workplace and politics, workers get a fairer shake and higher wages, and corporations have less power to push through laws that help businesses and block worker protections.

Once Covid-19 arrived, Trump did astonishingly little to save workers' jobs; he has done far less than European governments -- including Boris Johnson's conservative government in Britain.

The US jobless rate soared from 3.6% in January to 14.7% in April -- the highest rate since the Great Depression -- while in Germany it inched up to 6.1% in May from 5.2% in January and in Britain it remained unchanged at 3.9% between January and May

The reason: many European governments made sure that workers kept their jobs by agreeing to underwrite 80 or so percent of corporate payrolls so long as companies didn't lay off their workers. But the Trump administration did little to deter large corporations from laying off workers, and its Paycheck Protection Program -- which sought to discourage small businesses from laying off workers by making federal loans available to them that would be forgiven if they kept their employees -- was not nearly as effective in preventing layoffs as hoped.

Trump promised that factory closings would end on his watch, but the 1,600 workers at GM's shuttered auto plant in Lordstown, Ohio, saw that that was an empty promise.

Trump promised to do wonders to boost coal mining employment, eliminating many air-quality rules to do so, but between his inauguration and the time the pandemic hit, coal mining employment rose by a mere 200 jobs.

Many blue-collar workers applaud Trump's tough talk on trade, but the truth is that Trump, despite his tirades against the North American Free Trade Agreement, agreed to a revised Nafta with only modest improvements for American workers and a pathetic enforcement mechanism to stop violations by Mexico.

Only when Congressional Democrats demanded that Trump negotiate further improvements was the updated Nafta agreement changed to include an enforcement mechanism with real teeth and measures to prevent Mexican corporations from improperly undercutting American workers.

As for China, many business executives and foreign policy experts say Trump has badly bungled his trade war, forcing American consumers to pay billions in tariffs, causing supply shortages that hobbled many American businesses, and sparking retaliation that injured America's exports.

Moreover, Trump failed to line up our traditional allies, including Europe, Canada and Japan, to join us in pressuring China. That hugely reduced our bargaining leverage and made it easy for Beijing to single out America's businesses and workers for retaliation.

If you are a blue-collar worker who cares about opportunities for your children, you should realize that Trump has in ways made it harder for them. He has repeatedly pushed to scale back federal loans and grants for non-affluent students, changes that could increase the cost of higher education for student borrowers by more than $200 billion over 10 years.

His administration has blocked efforts to stop for-profit colleges from ripping off veterans -- many from blue-collar families -- after many veterans were bilked out of tens of thousands of dollars.

If you're a blue-collar worker, whether White, Black or brown, who cares primarily about banning abortions or bashing immigrants or having right-wing judicial appointments, then Trump is your guy. But if you are a blue-collar worker who cares about your economic well-being and opportunities for your children, Trump is not your friend

Source URL: https://portside.org/2020-08-12/if-youre-blue-collar-worker-trump-not-your-friend




The Narcissist's Craving For Significance

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k77dR4GhAlY


Pelosi Gives Prayers Instead of Leadership After Bailing Out The Wealthy

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Fbi0dEYBLA


'It Means Nothing': Trump’s Pledge to Aid Tenants Won’t Halt Evictions







https://portside.org/2020-08-12/it-means-nothing-trumps-pledge-aid-tenants-wont-halt-evictions

Portside Date: August 12, 2020
Author: Katy O'Donnell
Date of source: August 11, 2020
Politico



When President Donald Trump signed an executive order Saturday to shield tenants from the threat of eviction, he said it would “solve that problem largely, hopefully completely.”

Yet not only would his action fail to halt evictions, it wouldn't do much of anything to immediately help the 20 million or so Americans who face the loss of their homes in the next few months amid the coronavirus crisis.

Trump’s order does not extend the lapsed four-month eviction moratorium, which itself covered only about a quarter of the nation’s 44 million rental units. Instead, it merely directs the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Disease Control to “consider whether any measures temporarily halting residential evictions” are necessary to halt the spread of Covid-19.

It also provides no direct money to aid tenants in distress, who will eventually have to pay months of back rent. The departments of the Treasury and Housing and Urban Development were instructed to identify sources of funding. Neither could provide details Tuesday on how they would do that.

“It’s nothing but a political ploy,” said House Financial Services Chair Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), who dismissed the “so-called executive order” as a stunt designed to deflect criticism from the president. “It means nothing."

But housing advocates argue that the measure may actually be worse than doing nothing at all, by easing the urgency to reach a deal with Congress and giving renters a false sense of security.

The order will “mislead renters into believing that they are protected when they are not,” National Low Income Housing Coalition President and CEO Diane Yentel said in a statement.

“This executive order is reckless and harmful, offering false hope and risking increased confusion and chaos at a time when renters need assurance that they will not be kicked out of their homes during a pandemic,” she added.

The four-month CARES Act moratorium ended July 25, and most states are letting their own temporary protections lapse. At the same time, the federal enhancement to unemployment benefits — a $600-a-week boost that has helped struggling tenants pay at least some of their rent — has also expired.

The expiration of those benefits means somewhere between 19 million and 23 million people — about one in five renters in the U.S. — will be at risk of eviction by the end of next month, according to an analysis by the Aspen Institute. Negotiations to renew both measures as part of the next relief package broke down late last week.

Trump, questioned at his Tuesday press conference about the prospect of mass evictions, said, "We are not allowing that to happen.”

“We are stopping evictions," he added, referring to the executive order.

Waters, speaking with housing advocates on Monday, called for the urgent “passage of a statutory extension of the eviction moratorium and the creation of an emergency rental assistance fund.”

The House has passed two bills that would provide $100 billion to help tenants pay their rent, but the Senate has not moved on either piece of legislation.

Saturday’s order hints at rental assistance without specifying an amount or where Treasury and HUD should draw the money from.

HUD twice declined to provide details on what the agency plans to do differently as a result of the order. Treasury said it had no comment.

“We are in close contact with the White House and other federal agencies on the Executive Order and its implementation,” HUD spokesperson Brad Bishop said Tuesday. “We will provide additional information as these discussions continue.”

The White House, meanwhile, is insisting the new order will prevent people from losing their homes.

“There will be no evictions,” economic adviser Larry Kudlow said in an interview with CNN on Sunday.

When the CNN anchor pressed him on whether the order actually stops evictions as some struggling tenants may believe, Kudlow said it will provide a “mechanism” to do that.

“We're setting up a process, a mechanism, OK? I can't predict the future altogether,” he said.

Katy O’Donnell is a financial services reporter for Politico.

Source URL: https://portside.org/2020-08-12/it-means-nothing-trumps-pledge-aid-tenants-wont-halt-evictions




Thailand's students call for end to monarchy's privileges

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mGTfF1kREU