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California legislative leaders move to extend COVID rent relief, eviction protections

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Per week earlier than California’s eviction moratorium was scheduled to run out, prime Democrats within the Legislature introduced a proposal on Thursday to increase COVID-19 pandemic protections for tenants by one other three months so the state can end sending out lease reduction funds.

Meeting Invoice 2179 would transfer the date on which landlords might provoke eviction proceedings from April 1 to July 1, so long as an software is submitted by March 31 to a lease reduction program. Democratic legislative leaders mentioned the extension would give candidates extra time to obtain the assistance and keep away from shedding their properties.

“We have to defend eligible renters who’ve utilized for reduction funds, however haven’t acquired them but, or who will apply earlier than the March 31 deadline,” Senate President Professional Tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) and Meeting Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) mentioned in an announcement. “We made a dedication to those that are in line they usually shouldn’t be harmed due to how lengthy the method is taking. That’s why AB 2179 will obtain fast motion in each the Meeting and Senate.”

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For 2 years, lawmakers have negotiated laws to guard renters towards eviction if they’ve confronted pandemic-related hardship. California acquired a complete of $5.2 billion in federal funds to ascertain a lease reduction program final yr to assist alleviate the burden of debt for renters and landlords. The state created its personal program and is liable for doling out round $2.6 billion of that whole quantity. Some native governments selected to arrange their very own applications, they usually acquired the remainder of the cash.

The state-run program permits each landlords and tenants to use for the assistance, however they’re required to show COVID-19 hardship to qualify. This system was set as much as prioritize low-income residents at best danger of eviction, and pays as much as 100% of lease and utility in arrears.

Seventy-one % of probably voters think about housing affordability an enormous downside, in response to a March ballot by the nonpartisan Public Coverage Institute of California, and 44% of these surveyed mentioned they have been nervous about making their lease or mortgage funds. Forty-eight % of low-income renters struggled to pay lease in January and February of this yr, in response to the California Funds and Coverage Middle.

The laws wouldn’t change the March 31 deadline to use for rental help, however would stop the evictions of these nonetheless within the queue who haven’t but acquired the funds, both on the state or native stage. Advocates in current weeks had raised issues that 1000’s of Californians might face eviction though that they had pending functions.

“It’s on us to handle the 1000’s of Californians — landlords and tenants alike — who reached out to state applications for assist and nonetheless have their functions pending,” mentioned Meeting Member Tim Grayson, a Harmony Democrat who co-wrote the laws. “It will be merciless, wasteful and unfair to topic these Californians to eviction or the lack of rental revenue now, once they have completed all the things requested of them, and distribution of their emergency rental help is imminent.”

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The state-run reduction program has significantly struggled to maintain up with demand. Of the 489,879 households which have utilized for the help, 214,247 have been served, in response to a state dashboard that tracks this system. The typical help totals $11,488.

The state has paid out $2.46 billion in reduction and requested in November one other $1.9 billion from the U.S. Division of the Treasury. To this point, the federal authorities has despatched one other $200 million to California, although state officers count on extra to reach quickly. The dashboard doesn’t present information for the way a lot the local-run applications have administered.

Lawmakers in February permitted a legislation to unlock state funds and expedite the backlog of functions, which additionally eased restrictions on who might qualify for the reduction. That intervention allowed the state to quicken its tempo in processing funds by 25%, mentioned Geoffrey Ross, a deputy director on the state Division of Housing and Group Improvement. The company was processing about 8,000 funds per week earlier than the Legislature intervened, Ross mentioned, and has since bumped that as much as 10,000.

“The division stays completely dedicated to paying each eligible applicant,” Ross mentioned, including that the division’s aim is to complete the funds by early summer time.

“We aren’t going to relaxation till the ultimate fee has been made,” he mentioned.

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The brand new invoice would additionally supersede native eviction moratoriums and set up extra uniform guidelines for when evictions can begin. It’s scheduled to be heard in a legislative committee on Monday. In a submit responding to the proposal, California Condo Assn. Communications Director Mike Nemeth mentioned the laws would “keep a constant normal for eviction protections throughout California” and stop “a hodgepodge of native guidelines for tenants, landlords and courts to navigate.”

“The California Condo Affiliation is hopeful that the state could have labored via all pending (lease reduction) functions and made the suitable funds earlier than June 30, making AB 2179 the ultimate extension of the moratorium and eliminating any argument for native eviction moratoria to take its place,” Nemeth wrote.

The Alliance of Californians for Group Empowerment, nonetheless, referred to as for stronger guardrails. In a written assertion, the group mentioned that the state ought to lengthen the deadline for when households can apply for help and let native jurisdictions implement their very own protections for renters. Something in need of that, the group wrote, would flip the lease reduction program “right into a landlord bailout that ends in 1000’s of households on the streets.”

“If the Governor and State Management understood the extent of concern and instability felt by tenants whose landlords are wanting to evict them, they might do extra,” the assertion learn. “We’re nonetheless in a pandemic, and 1000’s of households are removed from restoration.”

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Texas Democratic candidate charged with faking racist comments to himself

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Texas Democratic candidate charged with faking racist comments to himself

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A Texas political candidate has been arrested on charges of sending fake hate messages to himself on social media.

Taral Patel, the Democratic candidate for Fort Bend Precinct 3 Commissioner, was arrested by Texas Rangers and is being charged with Online Impersonation and Misrepresentation of Identity.

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Authorities allege that Patel spent months sending a stream of racist and derogatory comments to himself, impersonating a supporter of incumbent Republican Commissioner Andy Meyers.

DISGRUNTLED ATHLETIC DIRECTOR ACCUSED OF FRAMING PRINCIPAL  WITH AI-GENERATED RACIST, ANTISEMITIC RECORDING

Taral Patel is pictured in the above mugshot. (Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office)

According to the arrest record for Patel, the investigation was launched in October 2023 after Meyers requested authorities to look into who was responsible for the vitriolic comment made at Patel.

Patel previously posted a collage of hateful comments ostensibly sent by Meyers supporters, claiming the messages represented a “deep and misguided fear” among the Republican Party.

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“As your Democratic candidate for County Commissioner, I am always open to criticism of my policy positions and stances on issues,” Patel said in the September 2023 post on Facebook. “However, when my Republican opponents supporters’ decide to hurl racist, anti-immigrant, Hinduphobic, or otherwise disgusting insults at my family, faith community, colleagues, and me – that crosses a line.”

SCAMMERS ARE USING FAKE NEWS, MALICIOUS LINKS TO TARGET YOU IN AN EMOTIONAL FACEBOOK PHISHING TRAP

Andy Meyers

Fort Bend County Commissioner W. A. “Andy” Meyers, Precinct 3, participates in the commissioners’ court meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2019, in Richmond. (Brett Comer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

Law enforcement reported that Patel used an image of a real Fort Bend resident as his profile picture without the individual’s consent.

Fort Bend County Republican Party Chairman Bobby Eberle released a statement reacting to Patel’s arrest, calling the situation “deeply concerning.” 

“Whether Republican or Democrat, such tactics should be unequivocally condemned by all who value integrity and accountability in politics,” Eberle said. “This is not a partisan issue, and the good people of Fort Bend County should be able to trust that when allegations are made, they are sincere.”

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He concluded, “Fort Bend County residents deserve better leadership than someone who will create a fake account and post manufactured racist attacks — attempting to turn neighbor against neighbor — for political gain.”

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Opinion: The Trump veep guessing game is silly

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Opinion: The Trump veep guessing game is silly

For all the conjecture and wishcasting about who or what could knock President Biden or Donald Trump out of the 2024 presidential race, their rematch was never much in doubt. Instead, in a measure of just how dispiriting the contest is, the only real question has been a relatively inconsequential one: Who will be Trump’s running mate?

That question should be: Who would want to be his running mate? Trump, after all, rewarded former Vice President Mike Pence for his four years of emasculating sycophancy by abandoning him to the mercies of the mob that wanted to hang Pence on Jan. 6, 2021, and telling an advisor, “Maybe our supporters have the right idea.” Pence, in a rebuke of his own, says he won’t vote for “anyone that puts themselves over the Constitution.”

Opinion Columnist

Jackie Calmes

Jackie Calmes brings a critical eye to the national political scene. She has decades of experience covering the White House and Congress.

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Pence’s sorry treatment at Trump’s hands apparently is no turnoff, however, for ambitious Republicans coveting proximity to power and possession of Air Force Two, should Trump be elected again. There is no shortage of veep wannabes for the disgraced former president to choose from.

And there’s no shortage of press guessing either. The quadrennial veepstakes speculation has been revving up and will go into overdrive over the next month, given Trump’s talk that he’ll wait to name his choice at the Republican National Convention in mid-July. “I have sort of a pretty good idea,” he teased Fox News on Thursday, and media speculators lately are betting on Sens. J.D. Vance of Ohio, Marco Rubio of Florida or North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum — MAGA men all, easily meeting the job requirement of being duly obsequious.

The whole speculative exercise is silly and always has been. For evidence, consider how often reporters and pundits have been surprised over the past half-century.

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In August 1988, I was huddled with other Washington reporters around a newsroom TV to watch George H.W. Bush unveil his vice presidential pick. To our shock, and nearly every pundit’s as well, he named the boyish Sen. Dan Quayle. “Bush not only didn’t name the best senator,” a co-worker exclaimed, “he didn’t name the best senator from Indiana!” (That was Richard Lugar).

Bush himself was something of a surprise VP choice when Ronald Reagan tapped him at the 1980 Republican convention, given the two men’s poisonous rivalry for the nomination. Reagan landed on Bush only after Reagan failed in his bid to produce a stunner for the ages: a supposed “dream ticket” with former President Gerald R. Ford in the vice presidential slot, promising a sort of co-presidency if they won.

In 1984 virtually no media types who tried to anticipate Walter Mondale’s Democratic running mate had among their top bets the relatively obscure Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York, but Mondale made her the first woman on a major-party presidential ticket. Because presidential candidates typically look for a partner who complements them — say, by their age, region or experience — Bill Clinton in 1992 pulled a fast one by selecting Sen. Al Gore of Tennessee, a fellow southerner, boomer and moderate Democrat.

Eight years later, when Gore was Democrats’ 2000 standard bearer, few journalists had Connecticut’s Sen. Joe Lieberman as a leading contender, but he became the first Jewish nominee on a major-party ticket. The big-time stumper that year, however, was on the Republican side: George W. Bush passed over the prospects that advisor Dick Cheney was vetting and tapped Cheney himself.

John McCain, needing to jump-start his 2008 campaign, brushed aside prominent Republican governors and senators that journalists (and McCain advisors) were promoting as veep contenders and settled for shock value on novice Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. “Sarah who?” was the near-universal reaction. America sure found out.

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The thing is, the only person who actually knows the choice for No. 2 is No. 1. And No. 1 can and often does reconsider.

That’s especially true when we’re talking about the ever-erratic Trump, who considers himself his own best strategist. He appears to approach the veep selection like a reality show episode, weighing whether would-be apprentices are out of “central casting” (but not so much as to outshine the star of the show) and how to stoke suspense for the finale.

Trump would probably like nothing better than to foil the media guessing game, and even his advisors’ script, and spring a last-minute twist. Heck, not being a dog lover, he might even give the nod to Kristi Noem. The South Dakota governor was considered a prime prospect until last month, when she was written off after she copped to executing Cricket, the family dog.

In 2016, Pence, Trump’s opposite in just about every way, didn’t dominate in the speculation but complemented the presidential candidate well. For the thrice-married former casino mogul, obsessed then with winning over evangelical voters, the pious Pence was just the partner Trump needed. In a signal of how he’d hire and fire as president, he announced the Pence pick in a tweet.

Trump no longer needs help getting evangelicals’ support. This time he’s said to be interested in Black men’s support, and perhaps snatching more of it from Biden by picking, say, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida or Ben Carson, his former Housing secretary.

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Who knows? Only Trump.

But that won’t stop us from speculating. It never has.

@jackiekcalmes

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Judge rules Missouri abortion ban did not aim to impose lawmakers' religious views on others

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Judge rules Missouri abortion ban did not aim to impose lawmakers' religious views on others

A judge in Missouri ruled that state lawmakers who passed a bill restricting abortion access were not attempting to force their religious beliefs on everyone in the state, despite claims from religious leaders.

The case brought by more than a dozen Christian, Jewish and Unitarian Universalist leaders who support abortion access was rejected in Judge Jason Sengheiser’s ruling on Friday.

The religious leaders sought a permanent injunction last year to prevent Missouri from enforcing its abortion ban and a declaration that provisions of the law violate the state Constitution.

One section of the statute that was challenged reads: “In recognition that Almighty God is the author of life, that all men and women are ‘endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among those are Life.’”

MISSOURI’S ABORTION LAW FACES CHALLENGE IN COURT OVER CLAIMS OF RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE

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Clergy who filed suit seeking to overturn Missouri’s abortion law and other opponents of the law hold a March through downtown St. Louis on Thursday, Jan. 19, 2023. (AP)

Sengheiser wrote in his ruling that there is similar language in the preamble to the Missouri Constitution, which states that there is “profound reverence for the Supreme Ruler of the Universe.”

The other challenged provisions do not include any explicit religious language, the judge ruled.

“While the determination that life begins at conception may run counter to some religious beliefs, it is not itself necessarily a religious belief,” Sengheiser wrote. “As such, it does not prevent all men and women from worshipping Almighty God or not worshipping according to the dictates of their own consciences.”

The Americans United for Separation of Church & State and the National Women’s Law Center, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of the religious leaders, said in a joint statement that they were considering their legal options following the judge’s ruling.

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“Missouri’s abortion ban is a direct attack on the separation of church and state, religious freedom and reproductive freedom,” the statement read.

Attorneys representing the state, however, argued that just because some supporters of the law oppose abortion for religious reasons does not mean that the law imposes their beliefs on other people in the state.

Sengheiser said that the state has historically attempted to restrict and criminalize abortion, pointing to statutes more than 100 years old.

SUPREME COURT RULES IN ABORTION MEDICATION CASE, FINDS GROUP LACKED STANDING TO CHALLENGE FDA APPROVAL

Abortion rights activist rally

Abortion rights activists rally at the Washington Monument before a march to the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, May 14, 2022. (JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AFP via Getty Images)

“Essentially, the only thing that changed is that Roe was reversed, opening the door to this further regulation,” he said, referring to the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade in 2022, which allowed states to make their own abortion laws.

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Shortly after Roe v. Wade was overturned two years ago, then-Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Gov. Mike Parson, both Republicans, filed paperwork to immediately enact a 2019 law prohibiting abortions except in cases of medical emergency. That law included a provision that made it effective only if Roe v. Wade was overturned.

The law makes it a felony punishable by five to 15 years in prison to perform or induce an abortion, and doctors who violate the law could lose their medical licenses. Women who undergo abortions cannot be prosecuted under the law.

Missouri, which already had some of the more restrictive abortion laws in the U.S., had a significant decline in the number of abortions performed. Residents instead traveled to the neighboring states of Illinois and Kansas to undergo the procedure.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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