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Just two days before the nationwide eviction moratorium was set to expire on March 31 st, the Biden administration re-extended it through June 30 th. The extension allows tenants who continue to struggle financially during the COVID-19 pandemic to avoid eviction for non-payment of rent. Tenants who qualify for protection from eviction, based on financial hardship, must provide proof via CDC Affidavit. Landlords cannot legally pursue an eviction/possession when a tenant produces an Affidavit. Any attempt to force eviction or ignore Affidavit protection can result in stiff financial penalties for landlords. As months pass without rent collected, tenants cannot however escape the responsibility of accrued rent arrearages; tenants can be sued for back rent once the moratorium ends. ....
Share Source: AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin A federal judge ruled on Friday that the deadline for ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment has long since passed. Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in Jan. 2020, giving the proposed amendment the bare minimum number of states needed to amend the Constitution. One small problem: the deadline for the proposed amendment came and went in 1982. The ruling from U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras in Washington, D.C., was a defeat for Illinois, Nevada and Virginia, which had lobbied the court to declare that the amendment should be added after Virginia became the 38th state to ratify it in 2020. ....
The White House is quietly working with Senate Democrats to ensure President Biden has a steady stream of nominees for the federal courts, according to people familiar with the matter and an administration official. Why it matters: Biden wants the federal judiciary to better reflect the country’s demographics, and to try to shield his unfolding legislative agenda from a judiciary currently dominated by Trump appointees.Stay on top of the latest market trends and economic insights with Axios Markets. Subscribe for freeWith Democrats in control of the White House and Senate, liberal-minded federal judges are already announcing their retirement.The administration's first nominee announcements are expected this month but could slide to April.The intrigue: Allies outside the White House say D.C. District Court Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, who is Black and 50, is likely to be nominated for a spot on the prestigious D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.That could prepare her for the Supr ....
The Atlantic A simple law would stop the U.S. government from rubber-stamping corporate consolidation. February 25, 2021 Adam Maida / Shutterstock / The Atlantic The oil giants ExxonMobil and Chevron each have assets valued in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Last year, The Wall Street Journalrecently revealed, the two companies considered what would have been among the largest corporate mergers in history a deal that would have reunited parts of the Standard Oil empire that federal trustbusters broke apart in 1911. In the end, ExxonMobil and Chevron didn’t attempt the transaction. But had the companies insisted on it, today’s antitrust authorities probably would have permitted the tie-up. Mergers among the very largest corporations are rarely stopped. Our research found that, out of the 78 proposed mergers from 2015 to 2019 in which the ....